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Hurricane Sandy smashes part of Atlantic City’s Boardwalk

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Of the estimated 35,000 people living in Cape May County’s barrier island towns — including Ocean City, Strathmere, Sea Isle City, Avalon, Stone Harbor, North Wildwood, Wildwood, Wildwood Crest and Cape May — only about 60 percent had left, officials said.

Martin Pagliughi, Cape May County’s director of emergency management, made it clear to holdouts that once Sandy hit, first responders would not help them evacuate.

“We can’t put their lives at risk,” Pagliughi said.

About 90 people were riding out the storm at Middle Township Elementary School No. 2. “If this keeps going the way they say it will, this one is going to be in the history books for a long time,” said Herbert Siefken, manager of a shelter.

In Atlantic City, the pounding surf and surge at high tide destroyed an 80-foot length of the Boardwalk at New Hampshire Avenue. Large parts of it were carried two blocks away, where they floated in the middle of the street. This segment of the Boardwalk received similar damage in the storms of 1962 and 1944.

Waves, meanwhile, continued to crash over the broken Boardwalk and seawall, parts of which had broken up as well. Ocean water crashed onto Atlantic Avenue, where cars were half-submerged.

Ocean City was essentially under water. Ocean City High School and storefronts along Asbury Avenue — a main drag — were flooded.

Some residents who declined to evacuate were temporarily isolated until low tide allowed rescuers to transport them to shelters in Upper Township on the mainland, according to Laurie Howey, a spokeswoman for Ocean City.

“Our greatest concern right now is the people are beginning to panic, realizing that they really should have gotten out,” said Howey, noting that the city had bused hundreds of the town’s 15,000 year-round residents to the mainland shelter.

In Cape May County, about 500 people remained in shelters that had been set up in various inland communities. Most will likely remain there at least into Tuesday, said Lenora Boninfante, a spokeswoman for the county.

“This is not done yet,” she said.

The barrier islands will likely remain off-limits overnight and access will not be restored until police, firefighters and emergency personnel can determine it is safe for residents to return, Boninfante said.

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