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Sandy-afflicted areas seek shelter for thousands of homeless

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Residents were shaken by reports of a nor’easter that could hit the region as soon as Wednesday.

Chanie Fettman gasped when her husband, Moishe Yosef Fettman, whispered in her ear about the approaching storm.

“I can kiss the tiles of my roof goodbye,” Moishe Fettman said. The family had weathered the hurricane safely but their basement flooded, ruining cherished belongings.

Forecasters said the new storm could bring rain, snow, more flooding and 55 mph winds to areas shattered by Sandy. At least 110 people died, most in New York and New Jersey, when the massive storm howled through the Northeast last Monday.

Signs of recovery were accumulating, as volunteers, supplies and relief money poured into the region. More subway lines began operating in New York City. The South Ferry station in Lower Manhattan, which Cuomo had compared to “a large fish tank,” was pumped dry after filling with water 30 feet deep.

Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg promised that city schools would reopen Monday even if kids had to be bused to different buildings. “Our kids have not had school for a week, and this is damaging them for the longer term,” he said.

Christie said 800 of New Jersey’s 2,400 schools would open Monday.

New Jersey’s Division of Elections is taking extraordinary measures to ensure that people displaced by the storm can still vote in Tuesday’s presidential election. The state agency said registered voters can cast a ballot at any polling place in the state, and can make arrangements to vote by email or fax.

In many places devastated by Sandy, people gathered to help one another. After the New York City Marathon was canceled, there were reports of runners dressed in distinctive orange marathon gear boarding the Staten Island Ferry to help people in that borough, which sustained some of the worst damage and at least 19 deaths.

“If there is a silver lining in this truly tragic storm, it is to see New Yorkers come out and come together. It’s to see the spirit of community and the spirit of neighborliness,” Cuomo said. “The nation knows New Yorkers as tough, that we’re tough. We’re tough! But we’re also sweet and we’re kind and we’re generous, and we’re giving, and you can see that all over the state today.”

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