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House finally OKs Sandy aid; Senate action expected soon

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He warned colleagues from disaster-prone regions to think hard before seeking to impose conditions on relief. “Florida, good luck with no more hurricanes. California, congratulations, did you get rid of the San Andreas fault? Mississippi…you think you’re not going to have a flood again?” LoBiondo said.

Northeast lawmakers from both parties were already fuming over the time it took the House to act.

“Never before has the House of Representatives taken so long to meet its obligations following a major disaster,’’ Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., complained.

“It is important that members who have been the benefactor of our good will in the past remember that generosity,” Rep. Jon Runyan, R-N.J., added, noting that Northeast taxpayers had helped pay for disaster aid to other areas of the country.  

The measure provides money for such things as debris cleanup, disaster unemployment assistance, replenishing stocks at food banks and soup kitchens and low-interest loans to business and homeowners. Funds also would go for repairs of the transportation system, Head Start centers and National Park facilities, including the docks and walkway at Liberty Island, where the Statue of Liberty remains closed.

Sandy, a hurricane before the center of the storm made landfall Oct. 29 in New Jersey, killed more than 125 people in the United States.

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