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Wintry storm brings new woe to hard-hit US Northeast

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A man shovels snow from a sidewalk on Fifth Avenue in New York as a strong winter storm hits the northeast on Wednesday. Photo: AFP

A wintry storm dropped snow and rain on the US Northeast on Wednesday, bringing dangerous winds and knocking out power in a region where hundreds of thousands were still in the dark after Superstorm Sandy.

The nor’easter storm brought fresh misery to thousands in New Jersey, New York and Connecticut whose homes were destroyed by Sandy when it smashed ashore on October 29, bringing historic flooding and high winds. The storm killed 120 people in the United States and Canada.
Snow falls on pedestrians on Madison Avenue on Wednesday. Photo: AFP
Snow falls on pedestrians on Madison Avenue on Wednesday. Photo: AFP

Some 22,000 homes and businesses from the Carolinas to New York lost power on Wednesday, joining the more than 640,000 customers who still lacked electricity from one of the biggest and costliest storms ever to hit the United States.

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New York and New Jersey evacuated the most vulnerable coastal areas ahead of the nor’easter, which was forecast to bring a high tide about 60 cm above normal by early Thursday.

No major flooding was reported during the storm’s first hours, though New York warned residents whose homes had flooded during Sandy to consider moving to friends’ homes on higher ground or to city shelters.

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Christine Jones, 73, said she had continued to live without heat or power in her beachside apartment building in coastal Far Rockaway in New York – even though it means climbing the stairs to her 10th floor apartment with a flashlight in hand.

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