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HUD secretary says administration seeks to get Jersey Shore open for business

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(MCT) — WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama’s point man for Superstorm Sandy recovery said Wednesday that the administration is working to get the Jersey Shore open for business next summer and pledged to help the state rebuild better and stronger as they try to make sense of damage assessment figures.

“We want to ensure that homes that were lost are rebuilt, businesses are restored and communities are made whole,” Shaun Donovan, secretary of Housing and Urban Development, told U.S. Sen. Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J., at an appropriations subcommittee hearing. “We want to build back stronger, smarter, safer and more resiliently — a 21st century response.”

Donovan said a summer of lost revenue at the Shore would be “devastating,” but some committee members said the federal government can’t afford to pay for everything.

“There just simply isn’t enough money to go around to fund all the essential functions of the federal government,” said Sen. Dan Coats, R-Ind., the top-ranking Republican on the subcommittee. But even Coats agreed the rebuilding effort should include measures to mitigate damage in future storms.

Gov. Chris Christie will be in Washington Thursday to press members of Congress as well as the Obama administration to help fund New Jersey’s recovery and to help finance projects to protect the state in future storms.

Christie’s visit is the latest push to get money and to get it quickly to homeowners, businesses and all those trying to recover from the storm that he says did nearly $37 billion in damage.

Added to all the number crunching is an effort to separate what private insurance will cover and what existing programs will provide to offset the combined $79 billion damage estimate Christie and New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo have sent Obama. The administration is also trying to separate immediate recovery needs from the long-term projects that could be funded in future budgets.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency has already paid $227.6 million in individual assistance, which would cover claims filed by homeowners in New Jersey. FEMA has issued another $81 million to local governments for debris removal and emergency work to protect public health and safety.

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