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New Jersey braces for long rebuild after Sandy’s destruction

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Even communities along Raritan Bay were not spared. Houses were ripped off their foundations in Union Beach and boats that had been parked on lawns floated away.

“It’s like a war zone here,” Dan Finn, Spring Lake’s beach supervisor, said of the damage. “It’s devastating, just devastating.”

The level of destruction has overwhelmed local officials. Seaside Heights Mayor Bill Akers said decisions on recovery and rebuilding would have to be made by architects, engineers and insurance companies. “Where we go in the future, I don’t know,” he said of his ruined town. “It’s out of my league.”

Some towns could look drastically different after the rebuilding. For instance, older homes that were seriously damaged will have to be elevated to meet newer FEMA and state building codes. Many coastal South Carolina homes rebuilt after Hugo and those rebuilt on the Texas coast after Hurricane Ike in 2008 now have parking on the first floor and the living space elevated to a second floor.

Rebuilding decisions will be significantly influenced by the insurance companies, Liffmann said. Rates will rise generally; and to get better rates, residents and businesses will have to spend more on sturdier structures. As a result, some locations with higher risk may become more exclusive, as building costs and insurance rates price out some people who had been able to afford their little slice of the Jersey Shore in the past. Mom-and-pop businesses that had established themselves many years ago may also find it much more expensive to rebuild.

Liffmann said he has seen that scenario play out on Grand Isle, one of Louisiana’s low-lying barrier islands on the Gulf Coast. “They’ve been hit by many storms and had to rebuild multiple times, and while it used to be more blue collar — the Cajun Riviera — the homes are getting to look rather nice,” he said.

Shortly after Ike, officials and residents discussed making some hard-hit areas in Texas, like the Bolivar Peninsula, a natural seashore. But soon, residents started to rebuild their homes, raising them higher off the ground.

“If it’s so desirable and lovable, people will keep it going,” said John Jacob, a Texas A&M University professor who studies sustainable coastal development. “It comes down to what kind of feeling people have for it.”

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Yes, but only inconvenienced by closed streets
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