Hurricane Sandy's Rising Costs - NYTimes.com
Editorial
Hurricane Sandy’s Rising Costs
Published: November 27, 2012
Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s latest request for federal aid to help New York recover from Hurricane Sandy presents a shattering picture of what a giant storm can do to a dense metropolitan area. The total price tag, he said, would be more than $42 billion:
$33 billion to repair damaged housing and infrastructure and $9 billion
to help protect transit systems, the power network and sewage treatment
facilities from future storms.
Related
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Cuomo, in Aid Appeal, Cites Broad Reach of Storm (November 27, 2012)
Times Topic: Hurricane Sandy
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This is a financial cost that only Washington can afford, but, given the
worries about the deficit and the so-called fiscal cliff, this is a
difficult time to be asking Congress for help. The task now is for Mr.
Cuomo to join with other claimants — including Gov. Chris Christie of
New Jersey, who estimates the damage to his state at $29.4 billion — in a
unified effort to persuade President Obama and Congress to support one
or more supplemental appropriations by the end of the year. It would be
folly to wait for the next Congress, when the sense of urgency would
have faded.
Mr. Cuomo has finally added important and much-needed detail
to his earlier proposals for aid. He estimates, for example, that it
will cost more than $5 billion to repair substations, tracks and
equipment for the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, as well as
another $124 million to compensate the authority for lost revenues.
Hospitals and other health facilities in New York will need more than $3
billion to restore services. More than 300,000 housing units were
destroyed or damaged, costing $9.6 billion to replace or repair, with
$3.1 billion of that in New York City alone. Government response efforts
cost $1.6 billion, and businesses lost $6 billion.
These numbers ought to impress even a tightfisted Congress. But perhaps
the governor’s strongest argument is that, historically, Washington has
not been miserly after major disasters. According to Albany’s estimates,
Hurricane Katrina
exacted $146 billion in damages, in today’s dollars; the federal
government came up with more than $110 billion. The multiple disasters
inflicted by Hurricane Sandy call for similar magnanimity.
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