Shellshocked by Hurricane Sandy, their homes dark, cold and sometimes wet too, many of the New Yorkers worst affected by the storm are relying on the kindness of friends, relatives and even strangers.
In a city often depicted as harsh and unfriendly, residents have rushed to offer support — in the form of electrical supply, a bed for the night or a hot meal.
Jordan Elpern-Waxman lost electricity and heat in his Lower East Side apartment when the storm hit and turned to Gina Shedid, a friend in the Bushwick area of Brooklyn, which was largely unaffected by the storm.
Photo: AFP
“There’s no electricity, no heat, no hot water. I decided I was going to leave pretty much right away because I needed to work,” he said.
“Everybody in Manhattan was housing people, it’s like upper Manhattan became a refugee camp for everyone from lower Manhattan. I talked to Gina and she said ‘We have this extra bedroom,’” he added.
Angie Dykshorn, a 36-year-old photographer, lost power in her East Village apartment and has been charging her phone at a makeshift stand powered by a bicycle, one of many free charging opportunities across the city.
“There are a few places serving free food: Charcoal BBQ on Avenue C and a noodle place on 10th Street giving out free fried noodles,” she said.
Other businesses in the city have been doing their part as well.
Banks, grocery stores and even food trucks have offered up their power supply and some gyms have offered free use of their shower facilities to those without hot water.
A group of bike messengers have also banded together to provide free delivery to those in need.
Online, dozens of people posted messages on Craigslist and various listservs, offering help.
“Setting up supply/food/water hub on the Upper West Side to take down to the Lower East Side,” wrote Monica O’Malley on one network calling itself “Occupy Sandy,” after the Occupy Wall Street protest movement in New York’s financial district.
Non-profit worker Cecilia Pineda, 22, signed up with various Web sites offering her time. She participated in a Brooklyn cleanup effort and has been organizing food supplies for those affected by the storm.
“I just felt very fortunate for where I was and that nothing happened to me. I lost power, but realizing the damage that other people went through, I wanted to help,” she said.
In Melissa Maldonado-Salcedo’s Lower East Side building, many residents are too old or frail to leave.
“Some people have cooked everything they had in their fridges, so it wouldn’t spoil and have been sharing food door-to-door,” she said.
“I live in a gentrified neighborhood ... but ‘hipsters’ and people from the projects pulled together,” she added.
Beyond the most immediate needs — food, water, shelter — other New Yorkers are helping small companies survive while their offices are unusable.
Charlie O’Donnell, 33, who heads a local venture capital fund, has helped organize “coworking” opportunities — connecting displaced workers with offices willing to offer them temporary workspaces.
“It was right after the storm when I started reaching out to companies that I had invested in,” he said. “People started reaching out to me to see if I knew places where they could work.”
Using the Twitter hashtag #sandycoworking, he has helped match dozens of companies in need of a space with free desk spots.
For some, the spirit of coming together in the most difficult of times recalls the aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.
“It’s similar to after 9/11,” Dykshorn said. “It’s hard to get news with no power so we are all relying on each other for information and all helping people out.”
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