Submitted by Rona_Gura on

More After Effects of Sandy

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Lifestyle

I was shocked, the Thursday night before Nemo struck, at the sight of a large gas line on Hempstead Turnpike. My husband and I were leaving a restaurant and the line blocked the exit of the restaurant parking lot. When I asked the driver of the car that was blocking the exit to move his car a bit forward, he just ignored me and sat in his car until the gas line moved. And my husband and I sat in our car until he did so. In the past, while I recall running to the grocery store in anticipation of a snow storm, I don’t recall seeing gas lines as long as I did on Thursday night. The sight of the numerous gas lines as we drove home caused me to wonder whether people were reacting to the possibility of gas shortages  post-Nemo or the memories of the gas shortages we suffered through post-Sandy.

Approximately a month ago, I was at a dinner function that I have attended numerous times before. At the conclusion of the cocktail hour, the lights were dimmed to signal the guests to move from the cocktail room to the dining room. This simple signal was used by the caterer every time I attended this function. Yet, this time, when the lights went down I momentarily panicked and wondered out loud whether they had lost electricity. In all of the previous years in which I have attended this function, I never reacted fearfully to the lights being dimmed.

Perhaps, there are effects from Sandy that go beyond the damage we sustained to our homes and cars. Do you find yourself reacting differently post-Sandy?

Comments

Submitted by Lucas_Meyer on Sun, 02/10/2013 - 23:05

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Lucas Meyer

We have been traumatized by Sandy. That's the long and the short of it.

Submitted by Vincent_Serro on Mon, 02/11/2013 - 00:18

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Vincent Serro

I think these storms clearly point out the lack of investment in our infrastructure over the past few decades. There are streets as of this morning that haven't seen a snow plow in my town! We don't have the manpower or equipment to plow roads efficiently. We don't have trains capable of running in bad weather. We don't have a power company with the necessary equipment or man-power in place. We should expect better based on the state and local tax rates in our region (not to mention utility bills). However we've grown to realize we don't have a system in place that can handle extreme events. We deserve a better return on our tax and utility dollars.
Ester Horowitz

We worried about losing power too. The only quip I could come up with this time was that if we did at least I could put the food in the refrigerator in the garage and it would stay fresh. Other than that, I was nervous. I was happy to dig out of a foot of snow and have power.
Corey Bearak

We had excellent snow response mostly because the impact was overnight Friday to Sat and fewer folks were on the road. I am rather surprised by the LIE closing. It must be a money thing. The way to best address removal remains multiple "sweep" rather than larger accumulations that prevent plows from doing their work. The only thing we did different involved parking. Instead of meeting my brother and his wife at the restaurant. We had them meet us (they came in from Brooklyn and have a parking spot at their condo, take my dug out spot and I dropped them and his wife's former mom in law's where they visited while I took Shelly to the "mall". At the pre-arranged time, I picked them up to meet our step-mom for her birthday dinner.
Bigger issue was clients were co-producing a show that had its press night Friday and the issue was when/if to call it off. I was ready after viewing the updated Westchester forecasts at 1am. The decision got made at noon which required outreach but I am pretty sure most expected a cancellation.

Submitted by NULL (not verified) on Mon, 02/11/2013 - 06:20

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Yes, I was one of those folks on a short gas line. Due to post Nemo and Sandy shortage fears. I listened for wind gusts most of the night which did not materialize. Prior to storm I took out all my lanterns and ran both my generator and snow thrower. That is just the way it is. Thankfully I only had to use the snow thrower.
Nancy Schess

I think we are all creatures of our own experiences. Sandy experiences are still raw for so many people. I expect we will see this sort of thing for a long time.

Submitted by Erik_Scheibe on Thu, 02/14/2013 - 03:11

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Erik Scheibe

Part of the problem is the changing weather. It is clearly becoming more extreme. I missed the snow storm-sorry ;) but I cannot ever remember getting 2 1/2 feet of snow in my entire life. The system for plaowing they had was not capable of handling that extreme depth. To make things worse, the guy in Suffolk county responsible for running it went AWOL. Now he has been resigned, but somehow is still getting paid. Wonderful! That'll show him.

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