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Sandy-afflicted areas seek shelter for thousands of homeless

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In Hoboken, N.J., construction worker Carlos Aponte was among those cheering from the street Sunday when power finally flickered on in his apartment building. He said the storm had brought out the best in people.

“The town came together,” he said. “The people that have power are helping other people charge phones. I think it made Hoboken a better place. On a regular day, everybody sticks to who you know. Now, people have extension cords just hanging out their windows. It gives me hope for the world.”

Huge challenges remain. As of Sunday afternoon, there were still nearly 1.9 million customers without power in seven states — as far south as West Virginia, as far north as Connecticut and as far west as Ohio. New York and New Jersey accounted for about 90 percent of the outages, with nearly 1 million customers without power in New Jersey alone.

Christie said 11,000 utility workers were working to bring back power.

“I know that when I tell you we’re under a million people out of power from 2.7 (million), that that doesn’t mean a damn thing to you unless your power’s on. I get it, I get it, all right? So! We won’t stop working until every last resident has their power back on.”

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(Carcamo reported from New York, Hennessy-Fiske from Hoboken, N.J., and Pearce from Los Angeles. Mitchell Landsberg in Los Angeles contributed to this report.)

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