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  • Updated
    29
    Apr
    2013
    3:31pm, EDT

    Panorama: Sandy-struck Breezy Point, then and now

    Soon after Superstorm Sandy pushed a surge of water through the Queens, N.Y., neighborhood of Breezy Point, a fire engulfed more than 100 homes. A panoramic image taken on Nov. 1, 2012 (bottom image), shows the wrecked remains of a town that was both swamped and burned. While the Army Corps of Engineers has largely cleared the debris, little rebuilding has begun in this area (top image). Use the navigation buttons to move left or right or to zoom.( David Friedman and John Makely / NBC News)

    While some neighbors are almost ready to move back home, others are still unsure how much of their property can be rebuilt following the storm.

    Related links:

    • Six months after Sandy many residents are still adrift
    • Stars of Hope shine in Breezy Point
    • View other images of the aftermath of Superstorm Sandy from Breezy Point 
    • Sandy-struck Breezy Point facing 'greatest historical challenge'
    • Sandy victims on the move but temporary housing 'will never be...home'

     

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    •Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

    This story was originally published on Mon Apr 29, 2013 5:11 AM EDT

    13 comments

    Way to get after it folks! Lookin' good. They were still sitting on their roof tops this long after Katrina.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: hurricane, weather, new-york, fema, fire, flood, us-news, panorama, featured, sandy, rockaway, updated, breezy-point, superstorm
  • 19
    Feb
    2013
    3:31pm, EST

    Work begins on Snooki's destroyed Jersey Shore boardwalk

    Mark Wilson / Getty Images

    A worker cleans debris from the Fun Town Pier that was damaged by Superstorm Sandy, Feb. 19, in Seaside Heights, N.J.

    Mark Wilson / Getty Images

    Workers install new pilings to replace the boardwalk that was damaged by Superstorm Sandy, Feb. 19, in Seaside Heights, N.J.

    Mark Wilson / Getty Images

    Workers install new pilings for the boardwalk that was damaged by Superstorm Sandy, Feb. 19, in Seaside Heights, N.J.

    By Jon Sweeney, NBC News

    Rebuilding the boardwalk made famous by MTV's "Jersey Shore" began in earnest last Friday as heavy equipment including a gigantic drill and a pile-driving machine were brought onto the sand in the south end of Seaside Heights, N.J., the Associated Press reported.

    They quickly began drilling holes in the sand and pounding wooden pilings into them, shaking the ground for blocks around.

    It marked the beginning of a $3.6 million contract the borough awarded to rebuild the boardwalk. Mayor William Akers said the initial work — restoring the boardwalk so that it can be walked on safely — should be done by May 10. Continue reading.

    New Jersey Governor Chris Christie has estimated that damage in New Jersey caused by Superstorm Sandy could reach $37 billion.

    Related Links:

    • Lonely Lady Liberty awaits tourists and repairs after Sandy
    • 100 days after Hurricane Sandy, the Jersey Shore slowly recovers
    • Restoring memories, volunteers save Sandy-damaged photos
    • Slideshow: Hurricane Sandy

    Mark Wilson / Getty Images

    The Star Jet roller coaster remains in the water on Feb. 19, after the Casion Pier it sat on collapsed from the forces of Superstorm Sandy, in Seaside Heights, N.J.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

     

    5 comments

    Snooki's Boardwalk? Are you KIDDING?!?! That's an insult to everyone one of us that grew up on the Jersey Shore. She's a sham, and worse, a NEW YORKER! It's idiots like her that make NJ look bad!!

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  • 18
    Feb
    2013
    1:09pm, EST

    Lonely Lady Liberty awaits tourists and repairs after Sandy

    John Makely / NBC News

    A police officer makes his rounds at the Statue of Liberty National Monument which has been been closed since Hurricane Sandy.

    John Makely / NBC News

    Superintendent David Luchsinger walks along the pathways damaged by Hurricane Sandy on Liberty Island. Luchsinger and his wife were residents of the island when the storm hit in October 2012.

    John Makely / NBC News

    Much of the brick pathway on Liberty Island damaged by the storm will be replaced with larger pavers.

    John Makely / NBC News

    Ruined spotlights that once illuminated the Statue of Liberty need replacement.

    By Andrew Rafferty, NBC News

    The Statue of Liberty no longer towers over huddled masses these days. Instead, at her feet sit atop dumpsters filled with debris, piles of dirt and bricks ripped from the walkway that once led tourists around Liberty Island.

    More than three months after Hurricane Sandy devastated parts of New York and New Jersey, the symbol of American exceptionalism still stands on an island full of rubble. Lady Liberty escaped the storm unharmed, but like so many Sandy victims, her home was destroyed. About 75 percent of Liberty Island was submerged. Nearly all the island’s infrastructure was destroyed by water that was more than five feet deep over some parts of the 12-acre island.

    Neighboring Ellis Island has no upended sidewalks or debris anymore, but it will take a long time to repair the electrical system and infrastructure of the sprawling complex that welcomed 12 million immigrants to America.

    Both islands have been closed indefinitely to visitors.

    Despite the visible disarray, officials say they have recently turned a corner. The cleanup is largely complete, the damage is documented, and some relief money will soon start coming in to begin repairing millions of dollars worth of damage. Details of a final plan for the parks reopening will likely come within the next two weeks, according to park officials. They are hopeful the Statue of Liberty will be open by summer.

    But not knowing when Lady Liberty will welcome visitors again has caused frustrations, both for those who work in the park and for politicians who view the landmark as a revenue source for the New York economy. Earlier this month, Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y. asked the Department of the Interior to set a hard and fast timetable for reopening the statue.

    "The Statue of Liberty is still shuttered more than three months after Sandy struck the city and tourists, businesses and all New Yorkers need to know that the end is in sight," read a statement released by Schumer this month.

    The National Parks Service and the vendors that cater to the island stand to lose at least several million dollars in ticket, concession and souvenir sales, park officials estimate. They've already lost two of their busiest times of the year -- Thanksgiving and Christmas. Even on a cold February day between 7,000 to 8,000 people will brave the Hudson River to view some of America's best known landmarks. As the weather gets warmer, everything gets busier. Last year the Statue of Liberty welcomed 3.7 million visitors.

    John Makely / NBC News

    Millions of dollars in revenue are lost with the closure of the popular tourist destination.

    John Makely / NBC News

    A tour boat passes the heavily damaged auxiliary dock on Liberty Island.

    Those numbers are not lost on David Luchsinger, superintendent of the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island. He understands the toll that the prolonged closure has taken on the 450 employees and contractors who worked at the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island before Sandy.

    John Makely / NBC News

    Hurricane Sandy inundated Ellis Island, flooding all the basements where most of the mechanical systems operated. Ellis Island will probably take longer to open than Liberty Island.

    “We want it opened as soon as Sen. Schumer and everybody else does, and we're going to get it open as quickly as we can, and we're hoping that by the summertime we'll at least have the Statue of Liberty back open,” Luchsinger said.

    But Luchsinger's focus has been not only on rebuilding, but improving. Before coming to New York, Luchsinger spent three years in Louisiana helping the recovery effort from Hurricane Katrina and getting through Hurricane Gustav and Ike.  And for him, attention needs to be placed not only on repairing, but on preparing so that when the next storm hits, this type of devastation will not occur. That means elevating electrical and HVAC systems to prevent flooding from knocking them out again and looking into putting a gas line underground to Liberty Island.

    "That's what's taking so long, we want to make sure that when we put things back, we put them back the right way," said Luschsinger.

    For most of the past three months, the superintendent has had the task of telling media, members of government and the public that no timetable exists. Just this week, the Department of Transportation announced $28 million in emergency relief funding that will partially go toward repairing Liberty Island's two docks.

    "The tourist season means jobs and customers - and we want to help make sure popular parks and tourist destinations in New York and New Jersey are as accessible as possible and open for business," Federal Highway Administrator Victor Mendez said in a statement.

    The announcement set off a new round of speculation that Lady Liberty could be open to the public by Memorial Day. But Luchsinger, thanking the Department of Transportation for the aid, said that "the many other necessary repairs" will keep the park closed indefinitely.

    Also, it took 91 days after the storm hit Oct. 29 for Congress to pass a $50.5 billion relief package.

    After Hurricane Sandy swamped both The Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island much work remains according to Superintendent David Luchsinger, who also lost his residence in the storm.

    "Now that Congress has given us the funding, you know, we're in a position to start making things happen finally," said Luchsinger. But he is quick to point his team did not wait for a check to get to work. Almost as soon the storm moved out, the cleanup effort began. An incident command team took to the islands, working out of their cars.

    While progress is slow but sure on Liberty Island, much larger Ellis Island will take well beyond summer to get up and running. The silver lining is that none of museum’s more than one million artifacts was lost. After the storm, the valuables were shipped to a museum archival center in Landover, Maryland, and there are no plans in place for bringing them back anytime soon.

    Many of the employees who worked on Ellis Island and the surrounding parks now operate out of Federal Hall, still without phone lines.

    Members of the parks department were getting ready to celebrate in the days leading up to Sandy. For the past year, the interior of the monument had been closed for a $30 million renovation that made it more accessible to visitors with disabilities. On Oct. 27, the monument's 126th birthday, visitors were again able to peek through Lady Liberty's crown. Thankfully, since there was no damage to the statue during the storm, none of the new renovation will need repair.

    "The secretary [of the Interior Department] and I were celebrating one day and crying in our beer the second," joked Luchsinger. "But I know this park will come back, and I know it will be better than it was."

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    John Makely / NBC News

    The Registration Room at the Ellis Island Immigration Museum. While the building is intact, all of the mechanical systems in the basement were heavily damaged.

    John Makely / NBC News

    Until the building can be adequately climate-controlled, most of the artifacts that were on display in the Ellis Island Immigration Museum have been removed and archived in Maryland for safe-keeping.

    John Makely / NBC News

    A vacant wing of the Ellis Island Immigration Museum.

    John Makely / NBC News

    Slideshow: Recovering after Sandy

    Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

    107 comments

    Well Mr. Boehner, actions and no action does have consequences after all doesn't it? Such a shame, its bad enough people in the northeast had to wait how many months just to bring up funds for Sandy relief for a vote and probably still wouldn't have been brought up for a vote if he had not been call …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: travel, weather, new-york, featured, sandy, statue-of-liberty, ellis-island
  • 7
    Feb
    2013
    11:44am, EST

    100 days after Hurricane Sandy, the Jersey Shore slowly recovers

    Andrew Mills / The Star-Ledger

    LEFT: One of the most iconic images of Hurricane Sandy, the lemon yellow home in Union Beach split in half, but remained standing. RIGHT: The same property 100 days later.

    By Amy Ellis Nutt, The Star-Ledger

    Published 11:30am ET -- Too cold even for the seagulls, the Jersey Shore in winter is a desolate place. Up and down the abandoned beaches a fringe of snow and ice, like the frayed hem of an old wedding dress, sketches the edge of the last high tide. Only a handful of well-bundled souls, and a black Lab with no birds to chase, roam the ocean’s edge. Shuttered and silent, the Jersey Shore in winter is supposed to be bleak, but today, paused between storm and summer, 100 days after Hurricane Sandy and 110 days until Memorial Day, the shore remains a mournful place — struggling not to be.

    Continue reading: 100 days after Sandy, a crippled Jersey Shore stutters back to life

    More photos: The Jersey Shore 100 days later on nj.com.

    Andrew Mills / The Star-Ledger

    LEFT: The Atlantic Ocean has breached the Ocean County barrier island in three places in the borough of Mantoloking, and created a new inlet at the base of the Mantoloking Bridge. RIGHT: This is what the Mantoloking Bridge looks like 100 days later.

    Andrew Mills / The Star-Ledger

    LEFT: Work begins to clean up Ocean Avenue between 17th and 16th Avenues in Belmar on Wednesday after Hurricane Sandy wreaked havoc on the Jersey Shore. RIGHT: How Ocean Avenue looks today.

     

    Andrew Mills / The Star-Ledger

    LET: A destroyed sport utility vehicle at the intersection of Brielle Road and First Avenue on the Manasquan beachfront was one of the first images to be transmitted from the Jersey Shore after Sandy's storm surge subsided. RIGHT: The same intersection 100 days later.

    Slideshow: Recovering after Sandy

    Mario Tama / Getty Images

    Residents of the Northeast are still picking up the pieces after Superstorm Sandy.

    Launch slideshow

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

     

    1 comment

    Disgraceful!

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  • 4
    Feb
    2013
    11:34am, EST

    Restoring memories, volunteers save Sandy-damaged photos

    Richard Drew / AP

    Damaged photos belonging to Florence Catania, of Deer Park, N.Y., are evaluated during restoration by Operation Photo Rescue-Hurricane Sandy at New York's School of Visual Arts. on Feb. 2.

    Richard Drew / AP

    Photo restorer Dennis McKeever uses Photoshop to retouch a damaged photo belonging to Florence Catania of Deer Park, N.Y., on Feb. 2, during the restoration project of Operation Photo Rescue-Hurricane Sandy, at New York's School of Visual Arts.

    Richard Drew / AP

    Florence Catania, of Deer Park, N.Y., watches as her damaged photos are accepted for restoration on Feb. 2.

    The AP reports: Of all the images of Superstorm Sandy's destruction, the ones that linger for Florence Catania are the torn, stained pictures that hung on her walls.

    Her mother's decades-old wedding portrait, her own eighth-grade graduation photo, a snapshot that captured her mom on a carefree teenage day, all damaged in a Sandy-sparked fire at Catania's home in suburban Deer Park, N.Y.

    But volunteers scattered around the world are about to start digitally mending Catania's personal photos and others battered by Sandy, banding together online to restore items that can't be rebought.

    Founded after Hurricane Katrina, a nonprofit network of photographers, graphic artists and hobbyists has repaired more than 9,000 pictures discolored by floods, pockmarked by debris, speckled by mold and otherwise damaged by disasters in recent years. The Sandy project, which started this weekend, promises to be one of Operation Photo Rescue's most expert efforts yet.

    Richard Drew / AP

    Damaged photos belonging to Florence Catania, of Deer Park, N.Y., are evaluated during restoration.

    Related content:

    PhotoBlog: Rebuilding lives after Sandy, one photo at a time

    Slideshow: Recovering after Sandy

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    Comment

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  • 17
    Jan
    2013
    11:01am, EST

    Vogue features Hurricane Sandy fashion spread, sparks mixed reaction

    Vogue

    Models Chanel Iman and karlie Kloss pose with the FDNY.

    By Meena Hart Duerson, TODAY
    When Vogue decided to pay tribute to the heroes of Hurricane Sandy in its February issue, the magazine took a distinctly high-fashion approach: sticking supermodels in a set of stormy scenes alongside real first responders.

    "When Hurricane Sandy hit, the city's bravest and brightest punched back," the magazine wrote in its story "Storm Troupers." "With the area now on the mend, we paid these stalwart souls a visit, dressed up in the best of the New York collections. Call them New York's other finest."

    The result is a striking collection of images shot by legendary photographer Annie Leibovitz, featuring models flanking firemen, Con Ed workers, and neonatal caregivers, among others. Each image is accompanied by a photo caption from a Sandy hero, detailing what they went through during the storm. (For the full set of photos, head over to Vogue.)

    Vogue

    Iman, Kloss and model Kasia Struss pay tribute to the Coast Guard.

    But the glossy photos, released online Wednesday, left a bad taste in some critics' mouths, coming off as insensitive or offensive.

    "Now, Vogue has dedicated a lot of time and effort to raising money for Sandy recovery, and their contributions shouldn't be belittled," New York magazine noted. "But still, isn't it ridiculous to see all of these people, along with their helicopters, boats, and equipment, taking valuable time away from their jobs to splash through puddles with Chanel Iman?"

    Slate was even harsher on the magazine, calling it an "awful photo spread" and accusing Leibovitz of turning "firefighters, army reservists, and Con Ed workers into props."

    "Did Leibovitz not realize that the real, non-model people in her lens were 20,000 times more captivating and alive than the models or the clothes?" the site asked.

    Vogue

    Struss and Kloss with the Air NYPD.

    Reaction to the spread on Vogue's own Facebook page has been mixed. A post featuring the images has garnered over 3,300 likes, but the comments have been split.

    "Ridiculous...bad taste...and yes trying way too hard!" one commenter wrote.

    Vogue

    The images are featured in the February issue of Vogue.

    "I guess you either hate it or love it," wrote another. "I loved it!"

    Many in the fashion world ultimately defended the photos, arguing Vogue's efforts to aid in Sandy relief justified the images.

    "At first glance, seeing Karlie Kloss, Chanel Iman, and Arizona Muse next to Hurricane Sandy first responders feels a bit...incongruous, like the Vogue shoot is trying to glam up the crucial, hard-working, and decidedly unglamorous heroes," said fashion blog Refinery 29. "But as the Annie Leibowitz-shot spread continues, with the three atop a Coast Guard boat, or coddling babies at the Bellevue Neo-Natal Unit, it is clear the spread is less about sugar-coating tragedy, and more about New York fashion uniting to support the cause."

    What do you think: Did these photos go too far?

    More from TODAY:

    Sandy's angels: Victoria's Secret powers relief efforts
    Did French Vogue cross the line with blackface photos?
    Does this controversial photo shoot glamorize domestic abuse?
    LeBron, Gisele and Vogue: The cover controversy
    TIME cover mom defends breastfeeding 3-year-old son

    60 comments

    Here you have these pics of anorexic teenagers that look like vampires trying to "lead" the real people into the battle that is part of their real jobs.

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    Explore related topics: fashion, controversy, style, sandy, vogue
  • 15
    Jan
    2013
    2:41pm, EST

    New Yorkers knock down, rebuild, clean up homes months after Sandy

    Shannon Stapleton / Reuters

    A sign is seen outside a home devastated by fire and the effects of Hurricane Sandy in the Breezy Point section of the Queens borough in New York on Jan. 15.

    Justin Lane / EPA

    Two neighbors watch as Doreen Lagno's house, which was irreparably damaged by flood waters during Hurricane Sandy, is demolished in the Ocean Breeze neighborhood of Staten Island, New York on Jan. 15.

    Justin Lane / EPA

    The claw of a demolition vehicle brings down Doreen Lagno's house, which was irreparably damaged by flood waters during Hurricane Sandy, in the Ocean Breeze neighborhood of Staten Island.

    Justin Lane / EPA

    Peter Gill works with his father James and a friend Mark Faljean on repairs to his home that was damaged by flood waters in the wake of Hurricane Sandy in Staten Island, New York.

    Spencer Platt / Getty Images

    Workers with the parks department clean sand from a playground damaged during Hurricane Sandy in the Rockaways on Jan. 15.

    Spencer Platt / Getty Images

    Workers walk on a boardwalk damaged during Hurricane Sandy in the Rockaways on Jan. 15, in the Queens borough of New York City.

    Slideshow: Recovering after Sandy

    Mario Tama / Getty Images

    Residents of the Northeast are still picking up the pieces after Superstorm Sandy.

    Launch slideshow

    A $50.7 billion Superstorm Sandy aid package is expected to be voted on today in the House. The package, which has come under criticism by some fiscal conservatives, is being heavily pushed by Northeastern lawmakers. The money would be spent on immediate needs to the region including $5.4 billion for New York and New Jersey transit systems and $5.4 billion for the Federal Emergency Management Agency's disaster relief aid fund.

    -- Getty Images

    • With House set to OK Sandy spending, efforts continue to add unrelated funds
    • More images from Hurricane Sand coverage
    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    It's been two and a half months since Superstorm Sandy barreled through New Jersey and New York, but people are still desperately awaiting aid. NBC's Katy Tur reports.

    Comment

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  • 10
    Jan
    2013
    1:15pm, EST

    Airport runway becomes parking lot for Sandy-damaged vehicles

    Stan Honda / AFP - Getty Images

    Tens of thousands of vehicles damaged by super storm Sandy are being temporarily stored on runways and taxiways at Calverton Executive Airpark in Calverton, N.Y., on Jan. 9.

    Stan Honda / AFP - Getty Images

    Vehicles damaged by super storm Sandy fill the runways at Calverton Executive Airpark in Calverton, N.Y., on Jan. 9.

    Insurance Auto Auctions Inc., a salvage auto auction company specializing in total-loss vehicles, acquired cars and trucks damaged by super storm Sandy and are temporarily storing them at Calverton Executive Airpark in Calverton, N.Y.

    The cars are expected to be removed from the site within three to six months, and will be auctioned online to a variety of buyers.

    The company made a deal with the town of Riverhead, N.Y., to store the vehicles at the airport for nearly $3 million.

    • Concerns Over Tarmac Storage of Sandy-Damaged Cars
    • Sandy could impact unsuspecting used-car buyers

    - AFP-Getty Images and NBCNewYork.com

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    12 comments

    It seems like the used car market is about to get flooded with a bunch of lemons. If I were shopping for a car right now I'd buy new just to avoid one of these.

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  • 2
    Jan
    2013
    3:35pm, EST

    Cleaning up after Sandy damage, as Congress postpones vote for aid

    Spencer Platt / Getty Images

    A destroyed home is viewed along the beach in the Belle Harbor neighborhood in the Rockaways on Jan. 2, in the Queens borough of New York City. Criticism, including by President Barack Obama, has been directed at the Republican House's decision to adjourn without passing a Hurricane Sandy aid bill. According to early estimates, Hurricane Sandy inflicted at least $50 to $60 billion in damage across the Northeast, making it one of the most destructive storms ever.

    Spencer Platt / Getty Images

    The remains of part of the boardwalk lie along the beach in the Rockaways on Jan. 2, in the Queens borough of New York City.

    Slideshow: Recovering after Sandy

    Mario Tama / Getty Images

    Residents of the Northeast are still picking up the pieces after Superstorm Sandy.

    Launch slideshow

     

    Tracy Connor, NBC News -- House Republicans came under a blistering bipartisan assault Wednesday for punting on Sandy relief, with one GOP congressman saying anyone from New York or New Jersey who donates money to his brethren “should have his head examined.”

    The governors of New York and New Jersey accused the GOP-led House of a “dereliction of duty.” Rep. Peter King, a New York Republican, called the surprise vote pull-back “disgraceful, indefensible and immoral.”

    Continue reading.

    Spencer Platt / Getty Images

    A destroyed home is viewed along the beach in the Belle Harbor neighborhood in the Rockaways on Jan. 2, in the Queens borough of New York City.

    Spencer Platt / Getty Images

    Men help to construct a new sea wall along the beach in the Belle Harbor neighborhood in the Rockaways on Jan. 2, in the Queens borough of New York City.

    Spencer Platt / Getty Images

    A man walks on the remains of part of the boardwalk along the beach in the Rockaways on Jan. 2, in the Queens borough of New York City.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

     

    1 comment

    It's all a big scam, they don't need the money. They live on the shore line, beachfront property, luxury real estate, they already have money. They have insurance if they have a mortgage, if they don't choose to have insurance after the mortgage is paid -that's their choice. Where they live is vulne …

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    Explore related topics: new-york-city, queens, sandy, rockaways, hurricane-sandy
  • 24
    Dec
    2012
    11:50pm, EST

    A rare quiet Christmas Eve in Breezy Point

    David Friedman / NBC News

    Tom Fraser-Dillon tries out the new snare drum his son Mack just received as a Christmas present.

    By David Friedman

    Christmas Eve at the Fraser-Dillon house is supposed to be crazy. It’s supposed to be loud, and there should be 20 to 30 family members and friends coming through for non-stop cooking and celebration. There should be a real Christmas tree, “the fullest from the lot,” decorated Victorian style.

    This year it’s just Tom and Kim, their son Mack, 13, daughter Alexa, 19, her boyfriend Brian Kolb, their two dogs Gia and Otis, a pizza delivery, and a fake tree. But they’re here, while most of their neighbors are not.

    David Friedman / NBC News

    Kim and Tom, interrupted from last minute gift wrapping, try to coax Gia off the table.

    David Friedman / NBC News

    Brian Kolb, left, and Alexa, Kim and Mack Fraser-Dillon gather for a pizza delivery dinner on Christmas Eve.

    Their Breezy Point, N.Y., home was inundated with superstorm Sandy’s floodwaters. “Jellyfish on the table. Seaweed in the refrigerator,” Kim remembers finding after three feet of water receded from their main floor. The house has belonged to Kim’s family since 1969 and it’s the only home Mack and Alexa have ever known.

    “Kim said I want to be in by Christmas,” Tom recalls. So he got to work. He’s been living there full-time since the storm – eating many military style MREs – doing most of the cleanup and rebuilding work himself, with help from Kolb. He ticks off a list of tasks completed already: mold remediation, new flooring, new insulation, new sheetrock, new electrical.

    Today, just before Christmas Eve dinner, Tom got their heat working again for the first time since Sandy.

    David Friedman / NBC News

    Tom plays with Gia, left, and Otis.

    David Friedman / NBC News

    The Fraser-Dillon house is the only inhabited house in their neighborhood on Christmas Eve.

    See more of NBCNews.com's continuing coverage of Breezy Point in the aftermath of superstorm Sandy, including how some spent their Thanksgiving there.

    16 comments

    Merry Christmas, Tom, Kim and family. We never met but I'm happy I know all about people like you. Enjoy the holidays and when spring starts to turn to summer have the biggest Memorial Day party you ever had; I might just crash the gate!

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  • 21
    Dec
    2012
    7:59am, EST

    'Sandy Claus' delivers toys to storm-stricken kids

    Bebeto Matthews / AP

    "Sandy Claus" Michael Sciaraffo makes a toy delivery to a home in the Bell Harbor neighborhood of New York on Dec. 18, 2012. Using Facebook, Sciaraffo started a charitable enterprise to collect and personally deliver toys to children affected by Superstorm Sandy.

    Bebeto Matthews / AP

    Sciaraffo, a political consultant who has worked for Hillary Clinton and City Hall, sits at his workstation in Brooklyn as he takes a phone request for a toy on Dec. 18, 2012.

    The Associated Press reports — From his toy-cluttered Brooklyn apartment, the man in the red suit was making his list and checking it twice. But he made no distinction between naughty or nice: Every child on it would receive a gift from this Santa Claus.

    Related: 'Stars of hope' brighten Breezy Point

    For the children whose toys floated away during Superstorm Sandy, Michael Sciaraffo is playing the role of a real-life Saint Nick. Every afternoon and night, he stuffs his red sack to the brim with presents and heads out to storm-ravaged homes, personally delivering new toys to awestruck little kids whose play rooms were destroyed by floodwaters. 

    Bebeto Matthews / AP

    Elizabeth Sampol holds her daughter, Ella, 14 months, as she receives a toy from Michael Sciaraffo in the Belle Harbor section of Queens on Dec. 18, 2012.

    The charitable enterprise grew out of a Sandy donation outreach effort that Sciaraffo had been spearheading for weeks in the wake of the storm, drumming up donations of clothing and food through Facebook. As the holidays approached, he realized that lots of children would be without their toys this year. Read the full story.

    See more images of superstorm Sandy and its aftermath on PhotoBlog

    Bebeto Matthews / AP

    Ella Sampol looks at her present as her mother Elizabeth and Michael Sciaraffo look on, on Dec. 18, 2012.

    Bebeto Matthews / AP

    A rainbow appears as Michael Sciaraffo leaves the home of Ella Sampol in Belle Harbor, Queens on Dec. 18, 2012. "You don't see that every day," Sciaraffo said, grinning as his beard slipped down his face a little. "Amazing."

    Santa Claus brought early gifts to some of the children in New York affected Hurricane Sandy. TODAY.com's Dara Brown reports.

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    39 comments

    What a sweet and kind man. Gives me such pleasure to read this after all the pain of this last week. May God bless Michael Sciaraffo and us all through these trying times.

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    Explore related topics: new-york, christmas, us-news, santa, featured, sandy, sandy-claus
  • 20
    Dec
    2012
    1:27pm, EST

    'Stars of hope' brighten Breezy Point

    John Makely / NBC news

    John Makely / NBC News

    By John Makely, NBC News

    Brightly painted stars appear on the otherwise stark landscape of Breezy Point in a section where over 100 homes burned the night Superstorm Sandy hit.

    "Joy," "Hope" "Smile" and "You Got This" are just a few of the inspirational messages sent from children around the country who themselves have been affected by disaster. Stars of Hope is a project started by the New York Says Thank You Foundation, which began in 2007 after founder Jeff Parnes saw the devastation that an F5 tornado inflicted on Greensburg, Kansas. "It literally looked like a bomb. The town was 95 percent destroyed, trees were standing with no leaves, everything was just dirt, and all the families who stayed were living in FEMA trailers south of town," Parnes recalled.

    "We were standing there thinking, 'How do you bring color back to the town? How do you bring a sense of community back to the town, and how do you empower the children to be part of that dynamic?' So we just had this wacky idea --what if we paint wood stars and plant them on every corner ... and empower the kids to express through their own creativity their hopes for the future?" asked Parnes.

    He gave the town's schoolchildren the basic idea and they took it from there.  "We want you to think of one word that if your friends, family or neighbors were having a bad day and they saw that word, it would put a smile on their face," Parnes said. The kids painted expressions and designs on the stars, and the next day they were planted throughout Greensburg.  "So literally, overnight, this project was able to transform not just the physical landscape, but the emotional landscape."

    John Makely / NBC News

    John Makely / NBC News

    Since then, each town that receives stars paints stars for the next town hit with hardship. It's their way of paying it forward.

    About 5,000 more stars are coming to Sandy-hit towns from other communities that have seen their own disasters:  Joplin, Mo.,  Minot, N.D., Grossbeck, Texas.  All have stars in the pipeline, adding to the 2,000 already placed in 14 communities hit by the storm.

    "It's about empowering survivors. Kids get it, they have an innate sense of hope." Parnes said.

    At least one Breezy Point resident noticed the arrival of the stars this week.  "It's an amazing thing, whoever is doing it.  It gives you hope… each message is just great," said Timothy Brennan, an ironworker whose home was destroyed in the fire, as he was digging through the debris of an elderly neighbor's house looking for keepsakes. "You may have a tear, but you can have a smile also. "

    John Makely / NBC News

    Shine in the Darkness...Like a Star of Hope. One of 2,000 Stars of Hope placed throughout Sandy-affected areas.

    Related Links:
    • View other images of the aftermath of Superstorm Sandy from Breezy Point 
    • Sandy-struck Breezy Point facing 'greatest historical challenge'
    • Sandy victims on the move but temporary housing 'will never be...home'

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    4 comments

    Nice!... its nice to read something positive and encouraging, especially after this week.

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    Explore related topics: weather, new-york, us-news, featured, sandy, breezy-point
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