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Astorino: Sandy Cost Westchester $42 Million

County will keep emergency center open until late-December.

In addition to the three local lives lost by Sandy's destruction, the violent storm left Westchester with about $42 million dollars in damages, county executive Rob Astorino announced Wednesday morning.

"And the figure will likely rise," Astorino added, speaking from the county's Disaster Recovery Center in White Plains.

The storm plowed through Westchester and surrounding areas on Oct. 29, flooding coastlines, downing trees and knocking out power—in some cases, for over a week.

Two North Salem boys were killed by a falling tree and a Yonkers man was killed in an automobile accident during the height of the tempest.

A substantial portion of Westchester's damages—about $12 million—is linked to extensive wreckage at Rye Playland, Astorino said.

"The north boardwalk was obliterated," he said, adding that the ice casino was also slammed. Still, Astorino vowed the park will open in May.

Another $12.5 million in damages was dealt to other county parks, and $15 million in damages was spread across 30 of the county's municipalities.

Over 200 homes throughout Westchester were damaged by floods or falling trees, with four homes in Verplanck and Croton-on-Hudson completely destroyed. More than 50 businesses in Yonkers, Irvington, New Rochelle, Rye, Port Chester and the village of Mamaroneck were struck by coastal flooding.

County facilities were smacked, as well, when the Yonkers Wastewater Treatment Plant and a slate of county pump stations were hit by winds and water.

Some 300,000 Westchester utility customers lost power during or after the squall—280,000 with ConEd, and 30,000 with NYSEG.

Astorino said the county has reached out to both power companies about improving restoration efforts in the future, and steeling communities for the next storm.

"We need full [telephone] pole repairs, not Band-Aids," Astorino said. "And ConEd needs to do a better job communicating."

After speaking with New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg and several officials on Long Island, Astorino said Westchester did not face the brunt of the storm.

"We, as a county, were fairly lucky," he said. "It's not that we didn't have pain and suffering and three deaths, but by-and-large it was power outages and trees down."

Governor Andrew Cuomo has said Sandy cost all of New York State about $42 billion.

Westchester's Disaster Recovery Center at the County Center will remain open until Dec. 21 on a six day schedule, seeing residents Monday through Saturday from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.

The location helps those affected by the storm to apply for FEMA assistance; nearly 5,000 Westchester residents have already registered for aid.

"The Disaster Recovery Center was opened as a place where residents could get assistance in person from FEMA, the Small Business Administration, Con Edison and a variety of non-profit and county government agencies," Astorino said.

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Westcheter County Center, 98 Central Avenue  White Plains

FEMA registration: (800) 621-3362, or visit www.disasterassistance.gov

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Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
Frank May 23, 2013 at 03:32 pm
SATURDAY night at MTK Tavern!
Frank May 22, 2013 at 04:27 pm
And the food at MTK Tavern is great as well!
Frank May 20, 2013 at 02:26 pm
SATURDAY Night!
Lisa Buchman (Editor) May 17, 2013 at 11:44 am
This is a terrific addition to town! I know I struggle with mounting piles of things to donate andRead More finding places to give to. With the Community Center and now Goodwill, great to find a second home for goods.
Lisa Buchman (Editor) May 15, 2013 at 07:16 am
Thanks Stewart for posting this note! A good reminder for everyone about our shared roads.
Ahn Tou May 12, 2013 at 01:25 am
Okay but let's focus on the charter of the BOE. The Board of Education believes its primaryRead More responsibility should focus on creating an educational environment that will help our students become knowledgeable individuals, problem-solvers, quality producers, effective communicators, wholesome individuals, collaborative workers, ethical individuals, life-long learners, and responsible, accepting and involved citizens. We remain committed to providing a high quality, well-balanced educational program that supports our faculty and staff and helps our students meet and exceed State standards as well as high district goals. It says nothing about protecting the investments of taxpayers by voting "no" on every expenditure. We need forward thinking, broad minded individuals to help guide educational direction of our schools. Keeping expenses reasonable and and in check should be a consideration by the educational focus should be primary. Although novices, Trustees Tobin and Schiff have helped true the course of the board back to the direction of education. Mr Stone who himself admitted he had never even been to a BOE meeting before deciding to run offers no sense of motivation other than Dr Treyz and his friends think he'll help shift the direction back toward finance. Mr Holbrook is no different a candidate than Mr Lipton himself was 6 years ago.