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Hurricane Sandy smashes part of Atlantic City’s Boardwalk

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(MCT) — PHILADELPHIA — With powerful, damaging winds and relentless rain, Hurricane Sandy barreled into New Jersey and Pennsylvania on Monday, causing widespread flooding in shore communities, smashing part of Atlantic City’s Boardwalk, and leaving hundreds of thousands to hunker down in homes without power.

More than 4,600 New Jersey residents were evacuated to dozens of state, county and municipal shelters as the storm surge, heavy precipitation and full moon exacerbated tidal flooding, state officials said. Power outages were widespread, affecting about 1.3 million people in New Jersey and 166,000 Peco customers in the Philadelphia area by Monday evening.

At an evening news briefing in Ewing, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie said he feared loss of life in Atlantic City after the mayor directed residents to shelters in the city against his wishes — including one in a school one block from the bay. That shelter flooded.

Christie, who has long feuded with Atlantic City Mayor Lorenzo Langford, called off all evacuation missions in the Atlantic City area as the heart of the storm slammed into the coast.

“At this juncture there’s no other way for us to get them,” Christie said. “They’re going to have to ride out the storm there until at least 7 a.m.”

Speaking for her husband, who she noted was at a shelter with the displaced residents, Nynell Langford said: “The mayor’s only comment is that all this is not about the governor and is strictly about the constituents of this city.”

Christie also criticized residents who stayed on the barrier islands, particularly in Atlantic County, where a higher percentage of people defied gubernatorial evacuation orders than elsewhere.

President Barack Obama called Christie Monday for a one-on-one conversation. Christie told the president that FEMA was doing an “excellent” job, and Obama gave him a number at the White House to reach him directly.

Christie, who ordered the Atlantic City casinos closed and the barrier islands evacuated, said earlier Monday that at least 50 percent of residents in Brigantine had not left, and 25 percent of those in Seaside Heights remained. “The decision to stay on the barrier islands was a bad one,” the governor said.

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Were you impacted by last week's flooding?

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