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Christie boosts estimate of New Jersey’s Sandy recovery cost to $36.9 billion

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(MCT) — TRENTON, N.J. — Gov. Chris Christie boosted the cost of New Jersey’s recovery from Superstorm Sandy to $36.9 billion Wednesday and hired a former assistant U.S. attorney to oversee the state’s rebuilding effort.

A parade of escalating numbers detailed Sandy’s toll: More than 30,000 businesses and homes destroyed or structurally damaged, an additional 42,000 homes with problems, 100 miles of beach severely eroded. Already, Christie said, 233,000 people in the state have registered for assistance.

The revised cost estimate — which represents a $7.4 billion jump from the initial figures last week — now includes money to help the state forestall similar devastation in any future natural disasters. They were submitted to the White House on Wednesday as one of the first steps in a campaign to secure an unprecedented infusion of federal aid for the region.

“We think we’ve been very responsible with the numbers we put forward,” Christie said. “We haven’t padded the numbers, we’re not playing games, we’re not negotiating. These are numbers that we need and we hope that members of Congress go down and get it for us.”

The numbers submitted so far offer a broad-brush assessment of the havoc wreaked by Sandy in late October. Coupled with New York’s latest request for about $42 billion, they clearly put Sandy in rare company, giving it the potential to exceed Hurricane Katrina as the most costly storm ever in the United States.

Christie announced the latest damage assessment — and pledged bipartisan cooperation with New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo in seeking relief — during a State House news conference at which he introduced Marc Ferzan as New Jersey’s new overseer of the storm recovery. Ferzan worked under Christie at the U.S. attorney’s office for nearly a decade while the governor led the agency.

Christie said he made the decision to put one person in charge of the overall effort — rather than spread out the responsibility, as Cuomo has done — after consulting with various governors who steered their states through Katrina. Christie also announced Wednesday that the state has retained Witt Associates, a Washington, D.C.-based crisis management firm that was heavily involved in Katrina, to work with Ferzan.

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