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Second storm nears Northeast as it struggles to regain footing after Sandy

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(MCT) — SEA GATE, N.Y. — Hundreds of thousands of children finally went back to school Monday and New York slogged through a full-fledged commute — but the Northeast kept one eye on its halting recovery, the other on a you-can’t-be-serious second storm that could bring high winds and flooding to communities already staggered by Sandy.

“Insult to injury,” said Michael Szajngarten, as he sorted through his battered home in this seaside Brooklyn community, just down the road from the Coney Island boardwalk.

Half of Sea Gate’s 850 homes sustained significant damage, and 25 are gone. Three-quarters of a concrete sea wall, a barrier intended to protect the exposed spit of land from storms, was damaged or destroyed. Szajngarten, 33, a fifth-generation New Yorker, shuddered at the prospect of another storm — considering that Sandy had ripped a hole in his living room wall, offering him a suddenly unobstructed view of the sea.

“I have a giant hole and I’m trying to clean it out,” Szajngarten said. “The last thing I need now is for rain to wash everything away and make it all muddy again.”

A nor’easter churning off the southeast Monday was expected to rake the beleaguered Northeast on Wednesday and Thursday. Although the storm would by no means be as potent as Sandy, it could mean 2 inches of rain in some places, sustained winds of at least 40 mph and gusts approaching 60 mph. Snow could fall in Pennsylvania, New York and Connecticut. Water levels could rise by 3 or 4 feet in some areas when “breaking waves” as tall as 14 feet roll in ahead of the storm, the National Weather Service said.

President Barack Obama convened a briefing Monday with local, state and federal officials, and urged emergency responders to gird themselves for more weather. The federal government launched an initiative to coordinate fuel distribution, eliminating bureaucratic hurdles to combat a shortage that has left 27 percent of gas stations dry in the New York metropolitan area.

Local officials were also scrambling to respond. Some beachfront communities considered new evacuation orders. The Red Cross said it would assemble 80,000 blankets to distribute as temperatures dropped into the 30s. Authorities said they were moving to drain floodwaters and restore power as quickly as possible.

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