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A food cart provides the only light in a New York neighbourhood on Wednesday night. Photo: Reuters

New Yorkers queue at banks, shops to charge phones, use Wi-fi

With hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers still without power, good-natured queues form at every shop with electricity or Wi-fi

AFP

There was a post-hurricane run on New York banks, but the panic was to withdraw electricity, not cash. Hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers and thousands of tourists trapped in the great Sandy blackout are desperate to charge cellphones and laptops.

Any spare plug in bank lobbies, pharmacies, 24-hour delis and bars has come under assault from the masses, starved of power since Hurricane Sandy hit the city on Monday night.

A queue of 10 people, including two women with their dogs, waited at a Chase Manhattan bank on Third Avenue. An extension plug meant that three people at a time could recharge their phones or computers.

"Somebody brought the extension and left it, it's not ours," said a manager at the bank. "But we don't mind. People are suffering, a lot of our own staff are suffering. Since the storm a lot of people have been coming here at night because there is light and warmth. It is really cold outside."

There was a similar power grab at bank lobbies across New York where the lines are normally for automatic cash dispensers. People sat on suitcases tapping on their computers.

Bank lobbies have been packed every night since the storm and if it's not electricity the people want, it's Wi-fi. Some 50 people crowded into one branch where Chase added an internet hot spot late on Wednesday.

Another crowd armed with laptops crammed around the windows of a Starbucks coffee shop, which still had Wi-fi.

Further up Third Avenue another big queue formed at the socket at the entrance to a CVS pharmacy. Staff loaded depleted shelves alongside the waiting tourists, making no attempt to stop them.

"My flight home was cancelled because of the storm and I am not sure I will be able to extend my hotel after tomorrow," said Polish tourist Anton Andrzejewski, hoping to extend the life of his laptop and telephone. "It is my only contact with the world."

Behind him eight people were waiting. And while the power queues have been good-natured, Andrzejewski feared an attempt to use the plug twice might draw complaints.

More than 230,000 homes are without power on Manhattan. Most of the lower part of the island has been blacked out since Monday night and the crisis for these people is likely to last until the end of the week.

Theirs are among about six million homes and businesses in 15 states that were still without power on Wednesday, down from a high of nearly 8.5 million.

"I come here for a warm meal for my son and to charge up my phone," said Carmine Steedrup, a lower Manhattan resident who went to a 24-hour deli further north on Second Avenue with her 20-month-old son Aron. "It is a lifeline. I have no candles left and it is pretty grim in the southern part after dark."

The deli looked like a camp site. Suitcases, handbags and laptops brought by storm refugees were scattered across the 10 tables. Owner Lee Han-bok said: "I would not normally allow this kind of mess, but this has been an extraordinary week."

The lack of power has starved some businesses of money, but other astute store owners see an opportunity in helping deflated cellphone owners.

"Free Electricity" said a sign on a store in Lexington Avenue that sells vitamins and supplements. Inside, five people were plugged in. "Nobody wants to buy vitamins after an event like this. But they do want electricity and most people buy something after they have charged up," owner Pratap Lal said.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Run on banks - to charge cellphones
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