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Second storm nears Northeast as it struggles to regain footing after Sandy

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“All of this has made work more difficult and more urgent,” New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg said.

By Monday afternoon, power had been restored to 7.1 million of the 8.5 million homes and businesses, in 21 states, that lost electricity in the storm. About 1.4 million homes and businesses remained in the dark, most in New York and New Jersey. New Jersey remained in particularly dire straits; 19 percent of homes and businesses there lacked power.

Even without a second storm, authorities said that as many as 40,000 people could require temporary housing. So far, more than 34,000 families are getting some short-term hotel or rental payments in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut, according to federal officials.

Federal Emergency Management Agency Administrator Craig Fugate said 217,000 people have registered for FEMA assistance, with the vast majority of funding routed to housing assistance.

In New York City, 90 percent of its 1,700 public schools reopened Monday. Morning attendance was 86 percent, Bloomberg said.

New York Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo said construction had resumed at the World Trade Center site in Lower Manhattan — where a cascade of floodwater was captured in an iconic photograph during the height of the storm. Authorities had also finished pumping out 16 million gallons of floodwater from the National September 11 Memorial and Museum.

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie said the 12th and final casino in Atlantic City, the historic Jersey Shore town just north of where Sandy made landfall, had reopened. PATH trains were cleared to begin offering limited service between New York and New Jersey on Tuesday morning. More vital subway lines opened; Bloomberg was among those taking the subway. Trains were packed and lines for the ferry were several hundred people deep. The commute was not seamless — it rarely is even in good weather — but it was a sign the region was lurching back to life.

At the New York Stock Exchange, floor traders — many of whom live in hard-hit outer boroughs of New York and in New Jersey — milled about on the floor, some enjoying the heat and power they lacked at home. Floor trader Jonathan Corpina estimated that more than 80 percent of his colleagues had returned.

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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
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Yes, my house sustained extensive damage
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