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Sandy recovery on Staten Island might take years

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Help is there, but it can be a challenge to get. FEMA, the Federal Emergency Management Agency — whose grants to cover home repairs, temporary rentals and other needs top out at $31,900 per household — has distributed more than $1.2 billion in such payments to Sandy victims in five states. That includes $89.3 million to Staten Island, where about half of 20,000 applicants have been approved for help.

Applicants who are ineligible — because they requested aid to fix second homes, for instance, or because they have flood insurance — must make do while they appeal to FEMA or wait for insurance checks. FEMA, which underwrites the federal flood insurance program, says it tried to expedite payouts by letting insurers pay advances up to $35,000 to homeowners. It says that 72,000 of 141,000 insurance claims have been settled.

In New Jersey, though, Gov. Chris Christie says just 30 percent of flood insurance claims have been settled, and he lashed out Tuesday at the delays.

“I’ve been as patient as I’m going to be,” Christie said as he announced measures to force state-regulated insurance companies to respond more quickly to consumers requesting assistance.

Michael Byrne, FEMA’s federal coordinating officer, said he understood the frustration.

“The money is going out, but if you’re still waiting, it’s always too long,” Byrne said last week. “We can never move fast enough when it comes to putting money out on the street. We acknowledge that and we just try to work harder to get it done.”

But even people like Moore, who moved back home in mid-January, are far from where they want to be.

The storm flooded the ground floor of her two-story home, destroying carpets, kitchen appliances, lower kitchen cabinets, furniture and the electrical system. Waiting for insurance would have taken months, because of the checks and balances insurance companies and mortgage providers require. So Moore, a respiratory therapist, got a federally backed loan of $14,000.

“I’m completely in debt now,” said Moore, who says she was debt-free before Sandy. Though she is grateful for the 1.6 percent interest loan, Moore is annoyed by a system that forced her to borrow while uninsured neighbors received FEMA grants.

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