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Up First from NPR

Unprepared: There is No Plan

Up First from NPR

NPR

Daily News, News

4.552.8K Ratings

🗓️ 8 June 2025

⏱️ 29 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Part 2: As North Carolina struggles to build back after Hurricane Helene, NPR correspondent Laura Sullivan travels to New York and New Jersey years after Superstorm Sandy to find how recovery efforts fell short. And we learn special interests are shaping how we put communities back together.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Build it stronger, build it safer, build it back, fast.

0:05.0

Welcome back to the Sunday story and part two of our series on how badly we as a nation do at rebuilding after a big storm knocks us down.

0:15.5

Laura Sullivan and the crew at Frontline have been following along as North Carolina struggles to bounce back after Helene.

0:22.4

In Houston, they learned you can't always engineer your way out of danger.

0:27.1

Now they're looking for answers in another storm-prone area, New York and New Jersey Sea Coast,

0:32.8

to see how they've done in the years since Superstorm Sandy.

0:36.6

The idea there? Get out of the way of the water.

0:42.7

In 2012, Superstorm Sandy sent more than 12 feet of water

0:47.3

over communities along the coast of New York and New Jersey.

0:50.7

It was one of the worst flooding events in New York's history.

0:54.5

Recently, we headed back to some of the neighborhoods we first visited in the aftermath of Sandy.

0:59.7

And even though 13 years had passed since the storm, it almost felt like they were trapped in time, midway through a recovery.

1:08.6

Here on Staten Island's seacoast, the community used to be tight-knit, with families living

1:13.9

in little bungalows.

1:15.8

Now it feels desolate.

1:18.6

After the storm, some residents used recovery money to elevate their homes really high.

1:23.7

Others took a buyout from the federal government.

1:25.9

Their homes were leveled. And some did nothing. Their houses sit right as they were the night of the storm.

1:31.6

It's kind of sad.

1:33.5

Resident James Senagra calls it the jackalantron effect. Imagine the teeth, jagged, and irregularly spaced.

1:41.2

I mean, they should either make it into wetlands, like you could see down the road there,

1:45.6

that's all wetlands, or they should at least give more of an incentive for a community to be built

...

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