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IRENE, ONE YEAR LATER: The Big Storm That Brought The Jersey Shore Together

An event that mobilized and galvanized a region that was determined to stay safe

 

Some say it was the big storm that wasn't very big at all.

A year ago this weekend, Hurricane Irene plowed into the East Coast with a roar, churning up the shoreline and leaving shuttered businesses and displaced families in its wake.

By the time it got to the Jersey Shore, however, the storm that once packed 115 mph winds had fizzled into a tropical storm that felled trees, flooded roads and knocked out power to tens of thousands, but kept many more free from harm.

Still, few argue that Hurricane Irene did something that had rarely - if ever - been done before, doing as much to bring together the Jersey Shore, and give it the good name it has long had, that many believe a certain MTV show has not.

It galvanized and mobilized a region that had escaped storms and calamities such as these for two decades, or more, causing tens of thousands to evacuate in an orderly and peaceful way, and keep themselves out of the storm's path.

It was a storm that brought spectators to the sands of Long Branch, Manasquan, Belmar and Point Pleasant Beach to film and snap pictures of the water splashing up to the dunes, just as it was destroying them and chewing up more of the shoreline.

As it churned overnight on Aug. 26, 2011, it still managed to kill at least four people, force hundreds into packed shelters and shut down businesses throughout the state.

It was a hurricane that was supposed to be the first to hit the region directly since 1985. But for those old enough to remember, Irene paled in comparison to the deadly Nor'easter that plunged much of the Jersey Shore underwater in December 1992.

Still, it was windy and destructive enough to cause Governor Chris Christie to demand that people "get the hell off the beach." Had they stayed there, and not heeded his warning, perhaps it would have been worse.

There was enough damage that the Federal Emergency Management Administration temporarily opened a Disaster Recovery Center at Brick Township Civic Plaza on Chambers Bridge Road. FEMA approved more than $140 million in assistance to disaster survivors, while the Small Business Administration approved more than $48 million in disaster loans to homeowners, renters, businesses of all sizes, and nonprofit organizations.

As it turned out, for the hundreds of thousands of people who felt or heard the wind as it howled outside their homes, the storm that left many homes, businesses and lives in a state of disrepair - however temporary - was big enough.

The following are some of the stories that go back to that weekend, compiled by our Patch staff as it scoured the Jersey Shore during and after the storm, and found a population that had protected itself well, and recovered smoothly.

Long Branch

The days leading up to the storm were days of preparation and speculation for many residents, including officials, who seemed to agree that preparing for the storm was worse than the storm itself.

"We really got lucky," Mayor Adam Schneider said. "It was luck that it moved a few degrees in the other direction."

A shelter was opened at Long Branch Middle School and hundreds of residents went there to escape their homes, most of which were located in flood-prone areas and near the oceanfront.

When the actual hurricane hit, hundreds of residents lost power, trees were knocked down and streets were flooded.

Power outages proved to be a persistent problem throughout the area. A First Energy spokesman reported that more than 110,000 customers had been left without power in Central Jersey with 80,000, or more, in Monmouth County alone.

But, in Long Branch, the area that received the most damage was an apartment complex on the corner of Howland Avenue and Ocean Boulevard that had its roof torn off.

At the time, it was thought that a small tornado touched down, but Schneider said it was likely a "microburst."

"I remember following the path it took and you could see exactly where it hit," Schneider said. "It came right off the ocean and hit the apartment complex."

Luckily, the residents in the apartment and that area had all evacuated, and the damage done has been repaired.

Rumson and Fair Haven

Trees and power lines were down for days as hundreds of residents - perhaps thousands - in Rumson and Fair Haven had no power after being pounded by Irene.

The Rumson Police Department sent out a message to residents urging them to stay inside their homes: “Be advised, due to Hurricane Irene, there are numerous live power lines down on the ground or tangled in trees. Use extreme caution if you need to leave your home."

Department of Public Works crews were out cleaning up after the storm, removing trees from the streets so they could clear the area for emergency crews.

In Fair Haven, some residents had power two days after the storm hit, but there was some tree damage and power lines down. Police officers were telling residents they had no idea when the power would be restored.

"Roads are mostly clear, but people should try to stay inside," Mayor Mike Halfacre said at the time. "Our PD, FD and DPW have been doing a tremendous job all night."

Manasquan and Belmar

Two days after the storm hit, the lights were still out for some as people throughout the Manasquan and Belmar area began to survey the damage left in the wake of Irene.

Fallen tree limbs, flooded streets and a ravaged beachfront were common sights in southeastern Monmouth County.

In Manasquan, flooded roadways along the borough's waterfront impaired an effort to extinguish a two-alarm blaze in a home on Brielle Road.

With roads made impassable by fire trucks, the borough had prepared by equipping high-wheel OEM vehicles with water pumps and fire extinguishers. The firefighters pumped floodwater to fight the flames until they could successfully hook up hydrants.

"We could have very easily lost the west end of Brielle Road," Kircher said, crediting the Manasquan Volunteer Fire Department with minimizing a potentially disastrous situation.

On Route 35 in Belmar, motorists encountered blacked out street lights at the 8th Avenue intersection and a road closure to the flood prone area between Route 71 and 16th Avenue.

Belmar's beachfront also took a significant hit with numerous reports indicating that the storm surge created by Irene pushed water onto Ocean Avenue.

Berkeley Township

Mandatory evacuations were underway before Irene arrived on Friday, Aug. 26. Residents had until noon Saturday to get out. Police officers handed notices or taped them to front doors.

The mainland evacuations were the first that then-Township Councilman, now Mayor Carmen F. Amato Jr. could remember. Amato has lived in Bayville for 40 years.

The day before, then-Freeholder Director Joseph H. Vicari and Ocean County Emergency Management officials hunkered down at Robert J. Miller Airpark off Route 530 to brace themselves and residents for the coming storm.

Vicari wasted no time declaring a state of emergency in Ocean County, well ahead of the hurricane, which was expected to hit hard the next morning.

"Our goal is we don't want one life lost," Vicari said at the press conference. "In our lifetimes, this is the biggest hurricane we've ever experienced."

Berkeley officials and residents were hampered by evacuation orders, because there were and still aren't public shelters available in Berkeley, due to a lack of generators. Central Regional High School and the Berkeley Township Elementary School went unused.

Berkeley residents who had to leave either headed to family and friends or had to take their chances getting into a Toms River shelter. Toms River High School North filled up rapidly and officials there had to open more schools to cope with evacuees.

The worst arrived on Saturday, Aug. 27. Power went out in a number of areas throughout the township. Trees blew down, branches littered the roadways. But the winds never reached the expected 100 miles per hour.

When it was all over, South Seaside Park, Pelican Island, Good Luck Point and Glen Cove, were hit the hardest. Flood waters were two to three feet deep in Pelican Island and South Seaside Park. Roads into Pelican Island were blocked off.

Barnegat Township

A day after the storm hit, police barred traffic from a section of West Bay Avenue in front of St. Mary's Church while they waited for Jersey Central Power & Light crews to clear a downed wire on the road.

Residents gathered up tree limbs from front yards and, once the evacuation order for the eastern section of the township was lifted, drove out to the bayfront to take a look at a still-flooded municipal dock parking lot and take in the scoured but intact bay beach.

On Railroad Avenue between West Bay Avenue and Burr Street, Michelle and Harry Van Schmidt spent much of the day clearing and cutting up two of the three trees in their backyard that were toppled by the high winds – all of which missed their house.

On East Bay Avenue, Eric Calvert was finally unpacking his car and moving things back into his one-story home across the street from the bay. He and his girlfriend had fled the house ahead of Irene, going to friends’ houses further inland.

“We knew we had to get out, because of the severity of the storm,” Calvert said. “I’ve lived in Barnegat all my life, and I’ve never been rattled this way.”

Ocean City

Even as the last gusts of wind from Irene continued to blow, Ocean City was beginning the work of cleaning up from a storm that spared the island the worst of its fury.

A massive Category 3 hurricane just four days prior, Irene led emergency management officials to call for a mandatory evacuation of Ocean City, the first since Hurricane Gloria in 1985.

But the highest recorded gusts of wind on instruments at 59th Street were in the 50 to 59 mph range, according to Frank Donato, who served as Ocean City's emergency management coordinator during the storm.

Two days after the storm hit, all roads and bridges into Ocean City were open and evacuated residents were streaming back into town to find homes that were spared any significant damage. Christie also lifted orders that had closed southbound traffic on the Garden State Parkway.

Many side streets remained flooded with fresh rainwater as the high tide receded, but the flooding seemed to be limited to the low-lying streets and intersections that typically flood in any storm with heavy rainfall.

The beaches appeared to be spared significant erosion. Boats and homes on the bayside lagoons also appeared to fare well -- with none showing any signs of significant damage.

The island "didn't seem to lose much power, if any at all," Donato said.

"For the first full-scale mandatory evacuation in 26 years, I think it went very well," Donato said.

Doug Bergen, Noel Aliseo, Patricia Miller, Christopher Sheldon and Graelyn Brashear contributed to this report.

Related Topics: Hurricane Irene

Minden Yo

9:17 am on Saturday, August 25, 2012

Way to comment Christie..."get the hell off the beach". How eloquent a speaker. What a bully!

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AG

9:56 am on Saturday, August 25, 2012

Some people are just too stupid to respond to normal warnings - they need to be told in English they can understand. Bully? You need to look up the meaning of that word in the dictionary.

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Tired of Idiots

10:21 am on Saturday, August 25, 2012

"Minden Yo" – Bully ? ? ? Absolutely NOT.
Attempting to protect people without a brain or any common sense? YES ! ! !

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Tired of Idiots

10:22 am on Saturday, August 25, 2012

As a significant & very dangerous storm was heading DIRECTLY towards NJ our Governor viewed a live TV news broadcast from the NJ State Police Emergency Operations Center of 100's of “nit-wits” sunbathing & playing Frisbee on the Asbury Park beach clearly ignoring repeated warnings to prepare, evacuate the beaches and prepare to evacuate the barrier islands & bay front areas if necessary.
Governor Christie’s effective & eloquent warning :- ) got the media attention necessary to get approx. 1-million shore residents & summer visitors moving. It worked ! ! !
By the way, how was your day at the beach as the storm approached "Minden Yo"? What an “IDIOT”.

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proudnot2bliberal

12:43 pm on Monday, August 27, 2012

well when dealing with the low intelligent level of idiots who are in the direct path of a hurricane & are maxing out their tan on the beach so they can be like their idols the white trash at the jersey shore. Gov Christie didn’t want a repeat of the same stupidity that plagued New Orleans 6 yrs prior. A city below water level a cat 4 hurricane bearing down on you But since they lived in a LIEberal utopia where they were completely & totally dependent upon the gov for everything they didn’t have the brain power to get the heck out. this is what happens with BIG Government people rely on beurocrats to do everything for them. just look at socialist EU & its failure

crazy lady

9:25 am on Saturday, August 25, 2012

This website is called wall patch and yet no mention of wall. Again. Seems to be a lot of that lately.

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Jeff Gollin

10:23 am on Saturday, August 25, 2012

And to mark the anniversary of the Irene blackout, at least a few Holmdel neighborhoods lost electric power between 7 am and 9 am today. No explanation yet provided for the 2 hour outtage.

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Mike Simpson

11:09 am on Saturday, August 25, 2012

Power line being replaced on Telegraph Hill Rd - estimate couple of hours.. :-)

Xavier

10:33 am on Saturday, August 25, 2012

While I would never wish for someone to lose their home.. If you're building your house on the beach or in a known flood zone I have a tough time feeling any sympathy.

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Pat

11:00 am on Saturday, August 25, 2012

If you're accusing Christie of being a bully over his remarks about getting off the beach before Irene, you must have been one of the morons on the beach in Asbury. No common sense, even when you're hit over the head!

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Sal

11:34 am on Saturday, August 25, 2012

It is sad indeed that the Governor and many people posting here think that their fellow NJ Residents are nothing but morons and idiots___and thus must be spoken to in an aggressive arrogant manner that demonstrates their own disdain and contempt and their undignified manner that shows no normal or civilized level of respect towards their fellow residents. The only people who support the governor' lack of class are those who also lack class themselves.

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Sal

3:44 pm on Saturday, August 25, 2012

Come on people__how do you expect Gov. Christie to have respect for the people of NJ and speak to them in a civilized manner___when he does not even respect himself or his wife or his children. If he had any sense of being a "responsible person" he would not be so obese, which can easily kill him and make his wife a widow at an early age and prematurely deprive his children of their father.

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Carol

6:15 pm on Saturday, August 25, 2012

We had no power for7 days. That means no water either. Wish they could give us people with wells priority service so we can flush a toilet. We lost two refrigerators ful of food during that storm and the power companies were all down at the shore making sure the tourits were comfortable. Carol

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Gale Quinn

7:10 pm on Saturday, August 25, 2012

Carol. I totally agree with you. I live in Wall Township and, also, have well water(no city water) and was using buckets of water from my pool to flush he toilets. This was not easy at my age which I will not disclose. All Christie and JCPL were interested in was getting the beach front running because we were running into Labor Day weekend. The tourist industry is more important than the residents. In Belmar, the beach front was taken care of . The people living a few blocks from the beach(north end) were not. Thank god, we had a small generator which ran our refrigerator and freezer, but the cost of gas was not cheap. We were without power for six and one half days.

Hector Logan

9:54 pm on Saturday, August 25, 2012

This was on toms river patch. where is the toms river pictures?

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Daniel Nee

3:00 am on Sunday, August 26, 2012

This article was simultaneously published on many different Patch sites which make up our Jersey Shore Patch region.

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Patricia A. Miller

6:50 am on Sunday, August 26, 2012

Berkeley Patch also has a separate story on how the storm affected our town. Check out "A Look Back At Hurricane Irene."

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Martin B. Brilliant

1:30 pm on Sunday, August 26, 2012

"... galvanized and mobilized a region that had escaped storms and calamities such as these for two decades, or more ..." sounds about right. It must have been in the 1980s, though I don't remember exactly when, that flooding from a hurricane lifted my sailboat off its cradle at Monmouth Sailing Center and deposited it on a lawn two blocks away.

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JosephGhabourLaw

9:14 am on Monday, August 27, 2012

The biggest issue regarding Irene is that of emergency preparedness. Jersey Central Power & Light was unable to act swiftly after this hurricane -- which wasn't even a hurricane when it hit NJ.

If an actual hurricane hit this area, it's clearly doubtful that JCP&L would be able to quickly fix the damage, never mind assess the situation while creating and communicating a repair plan. We have staff whose power was out for days - and never had any idea of when the power was coming back on. Service interruptions do happen, but without any communication, residents are left not knowing what to do.

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Nancee Luciani

9:57 pm on Monday, August 27, 2012

Interesting that the Manchester Patch doesn't mention the damages done in Cedar Glen Homes. 12 units are now being demolished because of the awful damage and it took months to restore our community buildings.

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