11/04/2012

NY faces 'massive housing problem'

  • "People are in homes that are uninhabitable," New York's governor says
  • He describes it as a "massive housing problem"
  • Cold temperatures heighten health and other concerns in areas still without power
  • Mayor: Up to 40,000 people could need housing in New York City

(CNN) -- Tens of thousands of New Yorkers left without heat after Superstorm Sandy hit may need to leave their homes as temperatures plummet, but it's not clear where they'll go.

Between 30,000 and 40,000 people could need housing in New York City alone, Mayor Michael Bloomberg said Sunday. Officials are working on coming up with a solution, he said, but they haven't yet.

"I don't know that anyone has ever taken this many people and found housing for them overnight," he said.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo described it as a "massive housing problem."

"People are in homes that are uninhabitable," Cuomo told reporters. "It's going to become increasingly clear that they're uninhabitable when the temperature drops and the heat doesn't come on."

In Long Island's Nassau County, some people have died while trying to heat their homes, County Administrator Edward Mangano said Sunday.

"We've very concerned about people sheltering in place without proper heat," he said.

Official: Sandy-stricken areas will vote 'come hell or high water'

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For many, keeping warm isn't simply a matter of turning on the heat, after Superstorm Sandy knocked out gas lines and electricity. Statewide in New York, 730,000 people had no power for a fifth straight day Sunday, Cuomo said.

Some people's patience was running low, along with the temperatures.

Residents in the Rockaways, in Queens, vented their frustrations at Bloomberg as he toured the area Saturday. One woman yelled, "When are we going to get some help!" while a man talked about "old ladies in my building who have got nothing."pplementing and, in some cases, dissatisfied with the government response, neighbors and volunteers from afar to hard-hit areas over the weekend to offer food, clothing and whatever else to those who are still cold and hungry.

"We covered two children with a blanket freezing and shivering here trying to get food last night," Rockaway resident Lauren O'Connor told CNN affiliate NY1. "We said we had to do something."

Dropping temperatures are only one concern the region faces, with the presidential election only days away.

Election officials in New York City will temporarily relocate or combine some poll sites due to damage from Sandy, the Board of Elections said in a statement Sunday.

In New Jersey, Gov. Chris Christie has ordered early voting sites to offer extended hours through the weekend to encourage voters to make it to the polls.

For those who can't make it to their voting precincts, Christie ordered election officials to allow displaced New Jersey voters to cast their ballots electronically by submitting a mail-in ballot application via e-mail or fax. Once approved, the voter will be sent an electronic ballot that can, in turn, be e-mailed or faxed back to the county clerk.

Long gas lines test patience

Powerless in New Jersey

The 900-mile-wide superstorm left a huge swath of damage when it hit the Northeast this week, claiming at least 111 lives in the United States and two in Canada after earlier killing 67 around the Caribbean.

Worst-hit New York state suffered 48 deaths, including 41 in New York City, authorities said. Twenty of those were in Staten Island.

As communities grapple with the human toll, the price of the damage is stunning: between $30 billion and $50 billion, according to disaster modeling firm Eqecat. That far exceeds the firm's pre-storm estimate of $20 billion.

Officials said Sunday that relief was in sight for residents facing fuel shortages, with Defense Department plans to deliver generators and fuel to stations that need electricity and gasoline.

"We think things will be getting better. We know what a disaster this is," New York Sen. Charles Schumer said Sunday. "My wife waited two and half hours for gas yesterday and called me every half hour to see what I was doing about it, so this is an answer to her as well as to every New Yorker."

Meanwhile, Bloomberg said he plans to take the subway on Monday, a sign that transit is coming back.

New York City students will also go back to school Monday, Bloomberg said. Some students will be bused to other locations if their schools have been damaged and cannot reopen, he said.

The region may be in for more bad weather, with a weaker storm predicted for next week.

"As we have this nor'easter coming next week, we have to remain extremely vigilant about our neighbors," New York Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand said Sunday.

While many residents are seeking disaster relief help from federal and state officials, she said, some of the state's seniors may be afraid to leave their homes, even if they don't have heat. And they may not know what resources are available.

"What I'm most concerned about right now are the people we haven't met and we haven't seen," she said.

7 health risks in the wake of the superstorm

CNN's Sarah Hoye, Josh Levs, Mariano Castillo, Greg Botelho, Faith Karimi, David Ariosto, Erinn Cawthon, Henry Hanks and Maria White contributed to this report

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