Sandy Damage Won’t Deter Voters [POLL/AUDIO]
Today, New Jersey Decides 2012. And if there's one thing Hurricane Sandy didn't do - it was dampen voters' spirits.
Today, New Jersey Decides 2012. And if there's one thing Hurricane Sandy didn't do - it was dampen voters' spirits.
Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney's yearslong quest for the presidency is ending with a last-minute round of campaigning in one state he's showered with attention and another he's largely ignored.
Thousands are still living in emergency evacuation shelters after the Super S torm Sandy blew through our communities and the question becomes where can the residents find permanent housing.
As a Nor'easter is expected to affect New Jersey on Wednesday and Thursday, Brick's Office of Emergency Management has ordered mandatory evacuations for some residents in low-lying waterfront areas
Citing safety concerns, residents will not be allowed to return to their homes Tuesday on Seaside Park as first announced.
Long Beach Island and Seaside Park residents able to return home for the first time since Hurricane Sandy caused long backups on Route 72 heading for LBI.
As the Shore community continued to sift through the devastation of Hurricane Sandy on Saturday, the state of the Shore Conference's football programs was as varied as the damage across Monmouth and Ocean counties.
A little less than 1 million homes and businesses were still without power as of last night, compared with 2.7 million who lost their electricity at the height of Hurricane Sandy, but trouble could be headed our way. New Jersey is staring down the barrel of a nor'easter that could slam the state mid-week and put power restoration efforts into reverse.
It could have been worst, much worst. That's the conclusion of Asbury Park Mayor Ed Johnson after surveying the damage left by Hurricane Sandy.
One week after Hurricane Sandy battered the Garden state, several hundred thousand people still don't have their power back.
Although we knew Hurricane Sandy was on the way up from the Caribbean to the Garden State almost five days before she struck, officials say all the planning and prep in the world wouldn't have stopped Mother Nature's fury.