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View Full Version : Gasoline Crunch Deepens; NYC Taxi Firms Run Out of Fuel



Sparky
1st November 2012, 11:06 AM
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/gasoline-crunch-deepens-nyc-taxi-firms-run-fuel-160859920.html;_ylt=ApLM5GuSIUTdLhXYQkpnP7iiuYdG;_ ylu=X3oDMTNybXA2YWhjBG1pdANGUCBUb3AgU3RvcnkgTGVmdA Rwa2cDNjAyMjliYTMtMGFiZS0zNGI2LTk0ZGEtNWM1NjkzNWNj MmI0BHBvcwMxBHNlYwN0b3Bfc3RvcnkEdmVyAzBhMjIwN2EwLT I0NDItMTFlMi1iNzliLTNlZGM5NDM3ZjNhMw--;_ylg=X3oDMTFpNzk0NjhtBGludGwDdXMEbGFuZwNlbi11cwRw c3RhaWQDBHBzdGNhdANob21lBHB0A3NlY3Rpb25z;_ylv=3

EE_
1st November 2012, 11:33 AM
God displaying his wrath on the evil Jew?
The Jewish areas got hit pretty hard and are living in misery


Jewish community bears impact of Hurricane Sandy
By Adam Soclof · October 30, 2012

Photos 1 out of 3
PreviousForwardOther Media
The main building at the Isabella Freedman Jewish Retreat Center in Falls Village, Conn., sustained damage on Oct. 29, 2012 when Hurricane Sandy sent a 100-year-old tree slicing through the roof. (Isabella Freedman Jewish Retreat Center Facebook)NEW YORK (JTA) -- Less than a year into her job at North Shore Synagogue in Syosset, N.Y., Rabbi Debbie Bravo sounded remarkably poised as she and her community face one of their most powerful challenges together: Hurricane Sandy.

Bravo’s land line was dead. When she picked up her cell phone Tuesday, she had just returned from the local police station.

“I have a child who takes medication that has to be refrigerated,” she said calmly.

According to figures released by The Long Island Power Authority on Tuesday, more than 930,000 families -- 90 percent of all island residents -- are without power after Hurricane Sandy wrought havoc Monday night across the northeastern United States. Among those 930,000 are an estimated 139,000 Jewish househoolds.

Hurricane Sandy, which washed ashore Monday evening just south of Atlantic City, N.J., took dead aim at the most populous region of the country, home as well to the majority of the country's Jews. In its wake, it left a trail of devastation that may take weeks to restore, if not longer.

“I went over to the synagogue a few hours ago, which is right next to a woodsy area," Bravo said. "Ten plus trees are down, including a huge one down on the front law. Everyone’s saying this is a hundred times worse” than previous natural disasters that hit the island.

The greater New York area, home to the largest population of Jews in North America, took a harsh hit as severe winds and flooding toppled trees, triggered electrical fires and flooded public transportation systems. The result: mass evacuations of apartments and dormitories, widespread school closings and damaged homes and community institutions.

Early Tuesday afternoon, David Weisberg, executive director of the 120-year-old Isabella Freedman Retreat Center in Falls Village, Conn., posted a photo of a tree that literally sliced through the roof over the center’s main building.

“We’re looking in the short term how to work around that space and need to assess how long it will take to get that space repaired,” Weisberg said.

“It’s an amazingly precise cut,” he marvelled. “It fell at an angle perfectly perpendicular to the building, which will hopefully make the repair an easier one.”

Jewish communal organizations, whose offices, landlines and in some cases e-mail servers were closed or down on Tuesday, largely set up shop remotely as they set out to formulate a response.

“The concerns of the Jewish Federations movement is focussed on both those in the Jewish community and non-Jewish community as we work with local Jewish federations as well as local, state and federal emergency management personnel to assess the damage and look forward to recovery,” said William Daroff, vice president of public policy and director of the Washington office of The Jewish Federations of North America.

Daroff noted that while watching the devastation unfold, social media was a source of comfort. “Compared to visuals from New York and the Long Island coast, having a support structure and literally thousands of friends acquired through Facebook and Twitter helped me feel less alone as my family sat shuttering with gusts of wind at 50 mph.”

The Jewish United Fund/Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Chicago set up a relief fund Monday night, with The Jewish Federations of North America and Union for Reform Judaism following suit the next afternoon.

For those without power on Long Island, finding alternative to landlines was critical.

“A lot of people are not getting cell phone service at home,” Bravo said. “For one congregant, the only time i could talk to her was when she left her house.”

As Bravo attempts to establish and maintain contact with the elderly and other congregants -- including two with recent births -- she also pondered the next moves for her synagogue’s two b’nai mizvah this weekend, which in all likelihood will be conducted without power.

“Truthfully in my mind, our options are try to use daylight,” she said.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NcufVoFXNCs&feature=player_embedded#!

Horn
1st November 2012, 11:46 AM
And everyone thought the Citified NorthEast would be last to collapse,

might be the real trickle down deal from here on out.

EE_
1st November 2012, 11:55 AM
Interesting that the area that got hit hard, lower Manhatten, is where all the Jews are. The Diamond District, the Garment District and the Financial District. Maybe there is a God?
Next stop Israel?

http://sallanscorner.files.wordpress.com/2011/11/manhattan-neighborhoods.png

Horn
1st November 2012, 04:52 PM
I've been hearing reports like this from all the guys up there i know on the jersey shore, they say it was a very selective stripy storm on the whole.

one part of the island would get thrashed then the next was not so bad. This was the case for all four of those islands there in about a 200 miles.

Then even on the interior bay areas one marina would end up with all the boats in the parking lot, then the next would get through unscathed.

trippy

Large Sarge
1st November 2012, 04:56 PM
http://video.msnbc.msn.com/nightly-news/49650027#49650027

Neuro
1st November 2012, 05:26 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NcufVoFXNCs&feature=player_embedded#!
Oy Vey! Vat a disaster. Thank G-d for Fundrazr! Must be difficult to set it up without electricity. I wonder if they did it before Sandy struck, as a precaution?

EE_
1st November 2012, 05:32 PM
Oy Vey! Vat a disaster. Thank G-d for Fundrazr! Must be difficult to set it up without electricity. I wonder if they did it before Sandy struck, as a precaution?

Is there a 'one way ticket to Israel' Fundrazr? Where do I send my money?

Sparky
2nd November 2012, 11:20 PM
"In New Jersey, where people are not allowed to pump their own gas, Gov. Chris Christie ordered odd-even rationing for purchases in 12 counties, with the hopeful goals of cutting lines and preventing a fuel shortage."

I didn't realize that people are not allowed to pump their own gas in New Jersey. I don't like the sound of that. Oregon is the only other such U.S. state.

http://www.clickondetroit.com/news/Pockets-of-discontent-amid-storm-recovery/-/1719418/17236654/-/s4p6gt/-/index.html