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Jersey residents try to cope with devastation

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“It’s going to be a while. They have two or three trucks out here. We need 200 or 300 trucks,” he said.

A company representative said no one was available for comment.

Among the island’s ravages, not the most grave but surely among the most weirdly beloved was “the shack,” a small building that had survived for nearly 80 years on its sandy ground. As Shore towns developed, it became the local beach bum, greeting vacationers off eastbound Route 72 on the causeway.

“It’s gone,” said Chet Atkins, who owns the land where the collapsing pile of sun-bleached cedar and pine planks stood defiantly for decades. “I saw it with my own eyes. There are some pilings sticking out, but it’s gone.”

Two days after Sandy’s arrival in Brigantine, just north of Atlantic City, residents said they were slowly but surely cleaning up.

Nearly 70 percent of the town ignored a mandatory evacuation order, with many locals saying they figured they could ride out the storm. They did — but not without many houses sustaining significant damage.

Residents said many first floors were seriously damaged from flooding. On the north end of the island, where the seawall was breached several times, houses sagged amid piles of debris in the streets and two feet of sand around some of them. Siding and shingles littered the streets.

“Monday afternoon, when the bay came flying down the street, that was the scariest part,” Jody Turner said. “We’ve never had water ever come that high. It was close, but we made it.”

Turner’s neighbor Nikki Schwendemann said floodwaters were inches from the first floor of her house, but she was more worried about her 23-year-old son, who evacuated to the mainland to stay with his girlfriend and some friends and had not yet been able to return to the island, thanks to a travel ban.

The rest of the family, she said, decided to stick it out in Brigantine.

“It was bad everywhere. We heard New York, Pennsylvania, Delaware, and Maryland — all saying get out. Where were we going to go?” she said.

Jerry Pierce, who has lived in Brigantine for four years, said, “It was scary, not something we’d do again.”

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Were you impacted by last week's flooding?

Yes, but only inconvenienced by closed streets
Yes, water got close, but everything worked out OK
Yes, I had to evacuate my home or workplace
Yes, my house sustained extensive damage
No, I managed to avoid it all