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FEMA begins to set up recovery centers in New Jersey

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Hilary Bowden and James Bowden, right, embrace while helping James's brother with his destroyed home on Fox Beach Avenue on New York's Staten Island, on Thursday, November 1, 2012. (Photo by Glenn Koenig/Los Angeles Times/MCT)

(MCT) — PHILADELPHIA — Federal officials moved to establish disaster-recovery centers in storm-damaged areas of New Jersey as relief equipment and workers poured in, aid money began to flow, and state police were dispatched to arrest looters.

Mobile recovery centers will be set up first, followed by permanent centers for residents and business owners to file applications for aid, Craig Fugate, administrator of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, said Thursday.

State and local officials will help determine where the FEMA centers are put, Fugate said.

By Thursday morning, more than 36,000 storm victims from New Jersey, New York, and Connecticut had applied for federal disaster assistance, and more than $3.4 million in aid had been approved for some of them, President Barack Obama’s spokesman Jay Carney said.

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie sent state police to help protect hard-hit Shore towns from looters. State Attorney General Jeffrey Chiesa vowed looters would face stiff penalties.

“We want those hardest hit by Sandy to know that there is an increased police presence in these Shore communities and that we will be vigilant with respect to their homes and businesses while they are forced to remain inland for their safety,” Chiesa said. “At this time, fortunately, we have not received reports of any extensive looting.”

The Obama administration said Thursday it would provide about $16 million to hire 1,000 temporary workers in New Jersey to aid with storm cleanup. The money will go toward work on public structures as well as the delivery of humanitarian aid.

The administration also said it would give $10 million to New Jersey for emergency road repairs and reimburse 100 percent of the cost of emergency power and public transportation through Nov. 9 in the New Jersey counties covered under the expanding federal disaster declaration.

That’s an increase from the standard 75 percent share the federal government bears.

“This additional federal aid will help relieve the burden on the state and local governments as they respond to the enormous damage caused by Hurricane Sandy,” the state’s two U.S. senators, Frank Lautenberg and Robert Menendez, both Democrats, said in a statement. “This additional federal support will mean we can continue the cleanup and recovery effort without delay.”

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