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New Jersey braces for long rebuild after Sandy’s destruction

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But on Friday he acknowledged the painful road ahead.

“This is going to be long, it’s going to be expensive, and it’s going to be hard and it’s going to be frustrating at times — believe me, you’re going to be able to count on all those things,” he said. “But we’re going to be with you through every hardship, through every frustration and every step toward bringing New Jersey and its great shore back to the vitality it had the last summer and it’s had my entire life.

Even if homeowners and businesses can get their insurance checks quickly, they may end up with nowhere to spend it. Those with experience rebuilding elsewhere said demand for contractors, lumber and other building supplies will be fierce. “We saw this a lot during Katrina,” said Loretta Worters, a vice president of the Insurance Information Institute. “The money is there, but there is a supply shortage across the board.”

Complicating matters is that Sandy came so late in the hurricane season that a frigid winter could stymie rebuilding efforts. And those who have been through this level of devastation warn of unscrupulous contractors.

“There’s definitely going to be pressure on homeowners to rebuild quickly and they will be bombarded with suspect offers,” said Bob Bacon with the South Carolina Sea Grant Consortium, who witnessed Charleston rebuild after Hurricane Hugo ravaged the state in 1989. “It’s a period of much confusion, and building inspectors can be overwhelmed and overworked. Unsuspecting homeowners can be led astray.”

After Hugo, many houses in Charleston ended up off their foundations and in the streets — now a familiar sight at the Jersey Shore. The cleanup was enormous. “Charleston put 10 years’ worth of debris in its landfill in one year,” Bacon said.

In New Jersey, Sandy wrought destruction along the shore for more than 100 miles. The storm left mud and sand piled onto the floors of restaurants and hotels along Long Beach Island. It smashed mobile homes in Holgate. It pushed boats up onto a railroad bridge in Point Pleasant Beach. It tore away chunks of Spring Lake’s boardwalk and tossed them blocks inland, while spreading sand across Ocean Avenue. It punched a new inlet into the barrier island at Mantoloking.

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