Flooding Persists In Housing Authority; City Delivers Water and Food
Thousands are without power, and flood waters were not receding as of Sunday afternoon.
Mayor Dawn Zimmer, together with other city officials, delivered extra food, water and ice to residents of the Hoboken Housing Authority in an amphibious truck on Sunday afternoon, where residents were stranded because of flooding and loss of power.
City officials said it will take a couple of days—multiple tide cycles—until the water fully recedes.
Members of the National Guard drove the truck through the city, splashing through the most flooded parts of town as the only vehicle fully equiped to drive through five feet-deep water, and stocked it up with supplies.
The water in the southwestern part of town was not supposed to recede before the end of the day on Sunday. Although certain buildings were back up and running late afternoon, others were still without electricity.
Power was lost in the Hoboken Housing Authority around 4 a.m. on Sunday, multiple residents said.
The lack of power and mobility brought a lot of residents out to the streets, courtyards and knee-deep into water all through the day. Back-up generators only powered lights in the hallway and exit signs as food in the many fridges was going bad during the worst of the storm. The elevators were not working in the buildings.
The vast majority of Housing Authority residents in the southwestern part of town did not evacuate their homes.
Zimmer urged all Hoboken residents to leave town a few days before the storm, and again on Saturday. Later on that day, the mayor ordered a mandatory evacuation of all ground-floor units in the city.
The mayor said she walked around the city on Saturday, together with police officers, to explain the severity of the situation and urge people to leave town or go to the shelter at the Wallace School.
Executive Director of the Housing Authority Carmelo Garcia said in a phone call on Sunday he did not tell people to evacuate their apartments. For ground floor apartments, he said, drains were unpluged to try and prevent flooding.
Early on in the day, resident Shonteesha Johnson, 38, said she was in need of water and ice, "to save our food."
Some senior citizens in the HHA buildings were transported to a shelter or a hospital before Hurricane Irene hit, but most decided to stay put. Seniors in Columbian Towers on Bloomfield and Newark Streets also lost power, which lasted well into the afternoon on Sunday.
Before the storm hit, 80 emergency kits to get through the storm were handed out to residents by the HHA.
For most HHA residents—who experience severe flooding often in the southwestern part of town—a flood was not enough reason to leave.
Besides, said Anthony Braxton, 27, "no one really had any place to go." Looking at the flooding on Sunday afternoon, Braxton said he had never seen it this bad. Water was as deep as five feet in some parts of the housing authority. Mama Johnson Field was completely flooded.
"I think it's a mess," Braxton said.
The water also brought some other unpleasant circumstances to the housing authority. Maria Classen, 46, said that rain from the storm had seeped through her daughter's sixth floor apartment, causing a leak.
At 501 Marshall Drive, resident Kelly Smith said water had flooded some hallways, causing mice to run amok.
What prevailed mostly on early Sunday afternoon was a sense of being isolated in an area of town nobody can get to, residents said. Locked inside an area with streets that they were unable to cross, without power, most residents said they weren't sure what to do.
HHA resident Dynasty Steed, 24, said she would have liked to have a shelter in one of the common rooms of the Housing Authority. Steed's 8-year-old daughter Alyssa, said she was scared when the lights went out around 4 a.m. on Sunday, which woke her up.
Buses were provided to take residents to the state-run Izod center—to which evacuees in the Hoboken shelter were transported late Saturday night by city officials—but HHA residents said they were never clearly notified of when they buses would be there.
"Let's just be honest," said Braxton, "we're like the last people to take care of." Braxton said he only would have evacuated if Irene ended up being a category 3 or category 4 storm.
The area of the Housing Auhtority is notorious for its flooding problem. Many residents attributed the problem—and the lack of improvement up till now—on current and previous administrations.
Councilman Tim Occhipinti, who represents the area in and around the Housing Authority, made the flooding problem one of his main campaign issues.
On Sunday afternoon, agitated because of the situation, longtime HHA resident Margie Biart wondered where the councilman was during the storm. "I haven't heard from him," Biart said. "He should have been here with us."
Occhipinti did not respond to multiple attempts for comment.
But, down in the Housing Authority area, only one thing was stronger than the smell of raw sewage flowing through the streets: a sense of community.
"When it gets bad," said Frances Gilyard, 51, "the neighborhood sticks together. Because we don't have anybody else."
FAP
9:03 pm on Sunday, August 28, 2011
The Mayor, her staff, the cops, the fire department, the ambulance corp and a host of other have been working non-stop for about 30 hours. A big thank you to everyone. You guys did a heck of a job. And to any people or department I didn't list I'm sorry and thank you.
Hardworking Hoboken Resident
9:59 pm on Sunday, August 28, 2011
I agree with Hoboken Owl. My family and I live in southwest Hoboken, and took it upon ourselves to evacuate. Must be nice to sit around and wait to be taken care of.
4321
11:42 am on Monday, August 29, 2011
These people are old and poor. Chances are they had no place to go, other than a shelter. Either way they would have been taken care of.
Hardworking Hoboken Resident
10:00 pm on Sunday, August 28, 2011
Oh, and Frances Gilyard, you DO have someone else. You have the government.
rtrux
11:06 pm on Sunday, August 28, 2011
where was tim-o during all this? he didn't lend a hand, or even say a peep to the people in his ward?? what's up with that, i thought he was the golden boy councilperson?
Hardworking Hoboken Resident
11:31 pm on Sunday, August 28, 2011
Every resident of Hoboken had more than enough warning, updates, and planning advice from the mayor, Daen Zimmer. Literally, HHA residents had the same access to information that everyone else did. Did they expect Tim-O to show up with an engraved invitation to evacuate and/or prepare?
WhatsRightIsRight
11:38 pm on Sunday, August 28, 2011
HobokenOwl said it best. It is truly disgusting how these people could feel so entitled. Really.
rtrux
11:46 pm on Sunday, August 28, 2011
multiple offers were made to take people out of harm's way to wallace school and izod, how come no one went? don't ignore help, and then say you have nowhere to go and complain that no one cares about you.
maybe the administration should have followed tim-o's lead and offered residents $40 to evacuate.
hobokenhorse.com
8:28 am on Monday, August 29, 2011
Perhaps they should have sought out help from "the captains," those local community leaders who round up the payments to residents for absentee ballots. The name Braxton is famous there in that regard.
Sadly, this highlights an illness developed by government. There are those who wish to continue this unhealthy relationship as it comes in useful at election time.
Speaking of Tim, more on that and other flood matters:
http://hobokenhorse.com
Redrider765
9:44 am on Monday, August 29, 2011
A candidate who buys votes doesn't care about the person from whom they buy those votes once that check clears and that VBM ballot is turned in.
HobokenOwl
9:45 am on Monday, August 29, 2011
Why was my comment removed?
Hardworking Hoboken Resident
9:55 am on Monday, August 29, 2011
HobokenOwl, your original comment was beautifully written, and extremely poignant and insightful. It's a shame that freedom of speech is only applicable to extremists and rappers.
HobokenOwl
12:14 pm on Monday, August 29, 2011
Seems to me that someone got their panties in a bunch b/c I called out Carmelo for being ineffective as well as the unprepared residents for feeling entitled. Wow. Nice work, Claire. Glad that you could make sure to sanitize your site so only positive thoughts are shown. RIDICULOUS.
Scott M. Siegel
10:15 am on Monday, August 29, 2011
Tim was probably busy watching the Weather Channel.
FAP
10:23 am on Monday, August 29, 2011
Okay that was friggin hilarious.
Hobbs
11:37 am on Monday, August 29, 2011
Don't blame Timmy for cryan out loud !
Without his handlers telling him what to do he figured he would do nothing . :-)
Hardworking Hoboken Resident
1:48 pm on Monday, August 29, 2011
I feel like every single quote in this article pisses me off. Really, Dynasty Steed, who is 24 and has an 8 year old daughter? Your daughter was scared when the lights went off? If you were prepared with a flashlight and some candles like the rest of us, you wouldn't be sitting in the dark waiting to be rescued. I suppose the city should now provide generators for the housing authority so they never have to be inconvenienced again.
HobokenOwl
2:41 pm on Monday, August 29, 2011
Since I pay taxes, the city should provide me with everything too. I also would like a coach and 4 out front every day for a ride to the Path. Thanks.
Redrider765
3:17 pm on Monday, August 29, 2011
I have to say that the quote about putting a shelter in a common room in a building that is going to be surrounded by flood waters was particularly stupid. Why would anyone want to set up a shelter in an area that would have to be evacuated by boat? There was a shelter, you had the option to go there and you decided not to. Be happy the city went above and beyond to help those of you who decided not to evacuate and next time the city asks you to go to a shelter, go already!
Art
4:49 pm on Monday, August 29, 2011
I thought that was odd too. Why are your lights on when your sleeping at 4:00am?
Hobbs
6:33 am on Tuesday, August 30, 2011
Does Tim Occhipinti's really care about the people of the 4th Ward or was that just political rhetoric his handlers made up to cover up paying those hundreds of people to get him elected ?
Let's be honest if Occhipinti was not willing to help his political captains what can those who didn't get paid by his handlers expect ?