No lights, no water, Shelly Silver telling people to fill up water buckets from the fire hydrants to flush their toilets -
it's a mess:
LOWER MANHATTAN — The devastation Hurricane Sandy wrought in Lower Manhattan recalls the aftermath of 9/11, Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver said Thursday.
From the Lower East Side to the Financial District, residents are trekking up dark staircases carrying water to flush their toilets and supplies for their homebound elderly neighbors, Silver said.
At night, the pitch-black streets lined with shuttered businesses are deserted, and many residents say they are afraid to leave their home.
Silver detailed
his neighbors' many difficulties
in the wake of the ruinous storm, which inundated Lower Manhattan with
river water and knocked out power to tens of thousands of residents.
Silver, who lives on Grand Street on the Lower East Side, said he is
particularly concerned about elderly high-rise residents who cannot
leave their apartments to make the long hike down to the street.
"Some of them have no flashlights, they have no food, no
refrigeration, no freezers," Silver said. "As a resident who lives in a
high-rise building I'm not sure that everybody appreciates what the
challenges are."
Mayor Michael Bloomberg questioned the comparison of the hurricane to the terror attack.
"I don't know how you compare it to 9/11," Bloomberg said at the same
press conference Thursday. "In that case, it was one site. Much more
damage. Three thousand lives. But it was in one site. Here, a lot of it
is the distribution of the problem and the transportation issues and
infrastructure kind of things."
Ro Sheffe, chairman of Community Board 1's Financial District
Committee, said that like Silver, he, too, is reminded of 9/11 when he
looks at his darkened neighborhood.
"The streets are filled with debris. All the retail stores are
closed," said Sheffe, who lives on Liberty Street. "It's sort of an
eerie reminder of how fragile this neighborhood is."
Oh, yeah?
And maybe you could focus on fixing these problems instead of worrying about PD/Superstorm Sandy Friday for teachers while you're at it.
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