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

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“Little by little, we’re getting more and more people back here,” he said. “Coming out of the subway this morning, it was nice to have to wait for cars to pass to cross over Broadway. … It felt like a normal Monday.”

Reflecting the difficulty of the months ahead, however, even progress was met with fresh concerns. In particular, Fugate said, “as power comes on, there are longer-term issues of rebuilding.”

Nowhere was that more evident than in Hoboken, N.J., a flood-ravaged city of 50,000 across the Hudson River from Manhattan. On Monday, almost everyone got their power back — prompting both elation and a wave of calls to emergency workers. Firefighters responded to carbon monoxide scares, calls to check fuel oil seeping up through heating vents, calls when residents smelled smoke.

“Calls are coming in constantly,” said Hoboken Fire Chief Richard Blohm. No major fire-related injuries had been reported among residents or firefighters, he said.

Salvatore Picinich, 35, revved up a generator at his mother’s rented house where the basement had been inundated with about 5 feet of water.

“Everyone’s coming today — the plumber, the electrician,” he said. “I feel it should be safe. We’ll see what happens, I guess.” As fire officials recommended, however, he was not going to flip the circuit breaker himself; he was going to wait for the electrician.

The recovery was uneven, underscoring fears that the working class would be the last on its feet. After power had been restored in much of the city, officials struggled to get electricity back to towering brick high-rises that comprised public housing.

Adrienne Rawlins, 43, walked across town to city hall to demand answers. “I’ve got two elderly women in there and a newborn. Where’s the generators?” Rawlins shouted at a volunteer.

Rawlins left fuming, with few answers. She said she’d sent her daughters, ages 4 and 5, to stay with their father a few blocks away. She and her neighbors, who weathered the storm in the high rises, have been feeding the elderly in the buildings. “We take care of our own,” she said.

Another woman pointed Rawlins toward Salvation Army volunteers and said that she, too, had been displaced. “Yours is not the only building,” the woman said.

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