Mayor says New York ready for Sandy

Mayor says New York ready for Sandy

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg said on Friday that the Big Apple is ready for anything Hurricane Sandy can throw at the city — and cautioned against panic.

The hurricane, which was headed for a still uncertain landfall on the US East Coast after pounding the Caribbean and the Bahamas, could make a direct hit on New York next week, according to forecasts.

By the time Sandy arrives in the crowded New York metro region, it would likely be reduced to a regular storm in terms of wind strength, but accompanied by heavy rain starting Monday and into Tuesday, forecasters say.

That could snarl the busy JFK, LaGuardia and Newark airports, cripple mass transit and flood densely populated low-lying areas, as happened when the remnants of Hurricane Irene struck in 2011.

Bloomberg said evacuations of shoreside neighborhoods and a shut-down of commuter trains and buses was possible.

“This is a very dangerous storm. You should pay attention to the various media outlets,” Bloomberg told a live news conference. “Sunday, all bets are off but we’ll make a bet on Sunday night and tell you what that is.”

“We are working on making sure that if we have to evacuate people, we have 65-odd shelters that will be fully stocked,” he said.

However, the mayor cautioned against overreacting, given the possibility of the storm weakening, as happened with Irene, or steering past the city.

“At the moment this storm could be a time when we say, ‘boy, it’s raining,’ and nothing more. Let’s hope that’s the case,” he said. “Irene, we thought, would be a disaster for our city and we had virtually no damage.”

Areas beyond New York City suffered huge power outages and fallen tree damage during Irene and that could happen again, officials warned.

Governor Andrew Cuomo said “although the storm track is still uncertain, Hurricane Sandy has the potential to affect many parts of New York State with a variety of threats including heavy rain, high winds, flooding, tornadoes, coastal surges, and widespread power outages.”

“I urge all New Yorkers to closely track the storm’s path, using local radio and television or online reports,” Cuomo said.

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