Outrage
In The Powerless Zone: A Dispatch From Downtown Manhattan
31
October, 2012
Mayor
Bloomberg said last night that we've come to "the end of the
downside" of Hurricane Sandy—hey, if you can spare $150 and a
cab ride, you can join him at the very first Brooklyn Nets game
tomorrow. But power in Lower Manhattan won't be restored for "days,"
and plenty of people are still facing a mandatory evacuation, if
they're not dodging glass shards or pitch black stairwells. While
many of us will gripe about having to work from brightly-lit homes
within feet of the machine that keeps food and alcoholic beverages
cold, let's remember that for many people living downtown, Sandy is
still here.
Jonathan
Maimon lives in Downtown Brooklyn, where he commutes to his job as a
associate portfolio manager for a mutual fund based in Jersey City.
Maimon spent six years in Manhattan and calls it "a place that
I'm pretty close with emotionally," which is why he made a
meandering five-hour, 12 mile run across Lower Manhattan to survey
the damage. Based on what he saw, he thinks that perhaps the city is
moving on too quickly.
"There
were no Red Cross vehicles, not a lot of city vehicles around to
reach out to people and ask them what services they needed,"
Maimon says. "It was just pedestrians walking around and
exploring. People were very calm, very friendly, you know how people
are in New York. But what was shocking is that there was no food.
Nothing was open. And then they have to go home to apartments without
power."
Maimon
adds, "And the most serious thing to me is elderly or disabled
people in high rise buildings—this affects you if you're rich or
poor. There's not a lot of ways for them to get out safely. I'm kinda
worried about the city not really knowing how many of those people
are out there." That's why he wrote this letter to us. "The
mayor just said that the worst of the storm was behind us, which is
factually true," Maimon adds. "But I personally think the
worst is yet to come. Not having power is going to wear people down."
Here's his letter [UPDATE: Help is on the way, people of the
Powerless Zones]:
I just returned from
Manhattan. I ran for 5 hours with stops, covering 12 miles in total,
scoping the island from west to east. You will not hear these stories
from the Mayor or Governor; these are my observations, informed by
discussions with real people who live in lower Manhattan:
1) Virtually every
retailer, restaurant and grocery store south of 38th street is
CLOSED. This is in an area covering 8 square miles. I only observed a
handful of bodegas in Soho and the East Village, along with Ben’s
Pizza on W3rd and MacDougal serving customers. Whole Foods Union
Square had a sign reading “because there is no electricity, we
cannot open.” There is no food, other than what you have in your
refrigerator.
2) To that point,
there are close to 400,000 people living below 38th street without
power. The mayor earlier said it could be 3 days without power; some
Con Ed guys I spoke with in the East Village think it could be
longer. Nobody knows.
3) No working traffic
lights in this region (drivers are generally being cautious and
appropriately yielding to pedestrians). Apartment stairwells are
pitch black. High rises have no elevator access.
4) For now, this is an
economic crisis - hourly workers cannot be paid, freelancers have no
clients, small businesses have no sales, office buildings are
shuttered. In my estimate, the lost output is $1 billion dollars
EVERY SINGLE DAY that goes by without power for lower Manhattan.
Included in this number is the shutdown of our major airports and
transportation system. (Note that NYC’s economy generates $2.8 bn
daily and over $1 trillion annually - which makes it the world’s
17th largest economy, if it was a country).
5) There is no running
water or flushing toilets for people living in the Jacob Riis Houses
and surrounding NYCHA buildings on the Lower East Side. In my
estimate, this is roughly 20,000 people. One family I spoke with is
packing their bags and moving to Brooklyn until services are
restored. But it did not appear that all residents were evacuating,
even as their toilets did not flush.
6) I did not witness a
single Red Cross Truck or FEMA Vehicle or in lower Manhattan. Recall
the assistance these agencies provided after 9/11 - this is NOT
HAPPENING. There are bound to be hundreds of elderly people, rich and
poor, who live on the upper floors of buildings with elevators that
are now disabled. IF POWER IS NOT RESTORED, THIS WILL MOVE FROM BEING
AN ECONOMIC DISASTER TO A HUMANITARIAN DISASTER.
7) If you think
Chinatown normally has an unpleasant odor, imagine what it smells
like 24 hours following no refrigeration. Street vendors were trying
to unload perishables at bargain prices. I saw a fish weighing
roughly 20 pounds and spanning 3 feet from head to tail go to a buyer
for $1 dollar. $1 dollar!!!!!
[Here's the video he sent us.]
For
video GO HERE
8) The substation
responsible for the outage is a huge facility. It spans an entire
avenue from Avenue C to D and a length of street from 13th to 14th.
If crews have to inspect every coil and wire, it might be MORE THAN
THREE DAYS UNTIL POWER IS RESTORED. Additionally, the site did not
appear staffed with many Con Ed workers. As a note, the 2003 blackout
lasted 15 hours.
9) The water from the
storm surge was invariably contaminated - floating garbage, wood
pieces from the dock, and possibly sewage. One Nuyorican woman who
lived on Avenue C near 12th street noted the water level peaked above
her waist. She was still visibly shaken this afternoon. She also
recalled a huge noise at 8 pm when the substation failed. The sky, in
her words, turned from black to green
- There were some very generous things. Northern Spy Food Co. served lunch to everyone who lined up outside their restaurant at Avenue A and 12th street - polenta, pork buns, chicken, biscuits and freshly baked cookies. They get props in my book; all this food was served to locals at no charge.
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