Fair
42°
Morris, IL
Fair|Forecast »

Christie says New Jersey is seeking to reach ‘new normal’

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa
Michael Farina, left, Bobby Horan and Don Farina keep warm Monday, Novemebr 5, 2012, in Lindenhurst, New York. (Photo by Jessica Rotkiewicz/Newsday/MCT)

(MCT) — KEANSBURG, N.J. — And on the seventh day after the storm, President Barack Obama called New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie from Air Force One and put Bruce Springsteen on the phone.

Although the Democratic rocker has a notoriously frosty relationship with the Republican governor, Springsteen apparently appreciated the love Christie displayed last week for their battered home state.

Not only did they chat from Obama’s campaign trail Monday, according to the governor, but Springsteen gave him a hug at the Sandy benefit telethon Friday night. He told Christie he was proud of him.

“And he told me it’s official: We’re friends,” Christie said.

The governor called the experience a highlight of an otherwise devastating week. Christie surveyed more of Sandy’s impact Monday, when he visited two Monmouth County towns badly hit by the storm surge.

He saw foundations gutted and siding ripped off homes; he passed destroyed belongings on the sides of streets, and one sign reading: “I assure you; we’ve got guns.”

Christie spoke Monday of trying to reach a “new normal”: gas for cars, kids in school, roads free of trees, and clean water.

The state is getting there. About 765,000 households remained without power as of Monday afternoon, down from 2,700,000.

Only about 40 percent of school districts have reopened, and NJ Transit could operate only 13 of its normal 60 trains into New York City’s Penn Station.

There are “serious power and signal and track problems along the Northeast Corridor,” Christie said. As a result, he created an emergency bus service to take workers into the city.

An additional 350 buses from the U.S. Department of Transportation were expected to begin to arrive Monday to augment NJ Transit’s fleet, according to the offices of Democratic Sens. Frank Lautenberg and Robert Menendez of New Jersey.

To handle security, Attorney General Jeffrey S. Chiesa swore in more than 280 temporary state troopers from the police forces of eight states.

Recovery at the Jersey Shore is mixed. Christie is allowing access to some barrier islands on a “grab-and-go” basis: Property owners can take what they need and get out. And while the New Jersey League of Municipalities canceled its conference of local government officials for next week in Atlantic City, as of Monday all 12 casinos had reopened.

Previous Page|1|||

Comments


Reader Poll

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