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FEMA begins to set up recovery centers in New Jersey

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Lautenberg and Menendez asked Obama on Thursday to send gasoline and diesel fuel to alleviate critical shortages for emergency vehicles and facilities such as sewage-treatment plants.

And they asked FEMA to airlift additional equipment, such as more backup generators, dryers, and fuel to electric utilities to aid their efforts to restore power. More than 1.7 million customers in New Jersey remain without power — down from more than 2.7 million at the height of the outages.

Obama added two more New Jersey counties — Bergen and Somerset — to the eight previously declared disaster areas, including Atlantic, Cape May and Ocean Counties, because of Sandy’s winds and flooding.

More counties may be added to the list as federal inspectors assess damages.

Although no price tag has been put on the damage, Fugate said he was not worried about running short of federal money.

FEMA’s disaster-relief fund currently has $3.6 billion in it, and additional congressional appropriations are likely.

“We’re not going to run out of money in the disaster-relief fund,” Fugate said.

No FEMA trailers are expected to house displaced residents, as was the case after Hurricane Katrina in 2005. Fugate said enough motels, hotels, and rental units were available to accommodate Sandy victims.

About 9,000 people are now housed in temporary shelters, he said.

Some Shore residents began to return to their homes after Christie lifted the mandatory-evacuation order for the Atlantic County communities of Brigantine Beach, Margate City, and Longport Borough and the Cape May County towns of Wildwood, Wildwood Crest, North Wildwood, West Wildwood, Avalon, Stone Harbor, Sea Isle City, and Ocean City.

On hard-hit Long Beach Island, residents will not be allowed back until at least Wednesday, Long Beach Township Mayor Joe Mancini said Thursday.

“We have 300 gas leaks down here on the southern end,” Mancini told reporters as he showed them the Holgate section, where streets were still filled with sand, many homes were destroyed, and the smell of leaking gas filled the air.

“We lost 22-foot-high sand dunes,” Mancini said. “We have a monumental task here.”

As the mayor was answering reporters’ questions, he learned by phone that police officers had apparently turned away FEMA representatives.

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