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New Jersey Shore, ravaged by Sandy, might never be same

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It wasn’t unusual for generations of a family to head to the same stretch of beach, for children to play in the same neon-lighted arcades that once entertained their grandparents.

Interrupting that tradition, local residents said, would be the greatest loss of all.

Two-thirds of New Jersey’s $38 billion in tourism revenue last year was in the four seaside counties. New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie had made the Shore a pillar of his plans to revive the state’s battered economy.

Christie visited one ravaged beach town after another last week and offered the public a sentimental assessment that sounded like a eulogy. “It’s unfathomable,” he said. “You just can’t recognize the place.”

He vowed that the Shore would be back. Others aren’t so sure.

In the most devastated stretches, recovery hasn’t even begun. Police, worried about gas leaks and other hazards, closed causeways to some barrier islands.

On Friday and Saturday, police went door to door in Seaside Heights to remove residents who had refused to leave. Authorities declared the town — whose population of 3,000 normally swells to 65,000 in summer — unlivable, at least for now.

“Part of your childhood is lost,” said Triantafillos “Tommy” Parlapanides, whose family ran a snack bar that was destroyed. “It’s just gut-wrenching.”

Even some rescuers suffered losses. Bobby Stewart, 59, a volunteer firefighter in Seaside Heights, swam through 6 feet of floodwater to help rescue a couple and their golden retrievers when the storm hit Monday. Once safe, the rescued man began to cry — for putting Stewart at risk.

Stewart ran the Carousel Arcade, a boardwalk haven for pinball, Skeeball and the like. Washed away, all of it, down to the pylons. And the beachfront restaurant that Stewart’s son operated? Smashed in, flooded and full of sand.

“The whole structure of the town — from the sewer to the water to the electric and gas — is all gone,” Stewart said Saturday.

He spent the day at Our Lady of Perpetual Help church, preparing a chicken dinner for firefighters, and plans to help rebuild the town. “I worked for everything I had, and I can do it again.”

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Were you impacted by last week's flooding?

Yes, but only inconvenienced by closed streets
Yes, water got close, but everything worked out OK
Yes, I had to evacuate my home or workplace
Yes, my house sustained extensive damage
No, I managed to avoid it all