Chris Christie’s administration has not released any numbers relating to New Jersey residents displaced by Superstorm Sandy. In September, The Ocean County Planning Board estimated that 26,000 Ocean County residents remain displaced. Andrea Kassimatis lives in the neighboring county of Monmouth.
Part I: Before Sandy
We bought our house in September 2009, we closed on the house the same day I started Nursing School. Mike and I both worked two jobs to save up for the down payment and had 12 cents leftover in the bank after closing on the house.
The house was left unloved so there was plenty of work we needed to do. Mike spent the first few nights ripping up old carpets to get rid of the smell and we spent our first paycheck on flooring for the living room. Mike was so excited about the floors that he spent the entire night laying down the flooring and he still made it to work the next day! So we worked paycheck to paycheck and room by room till the house was functional.
The next few years we worked on the house to make it our home. We enjoyed celebrating holidays and having the kids’ birthday parties at our house. We had our son Collin’s 5th birthday party on October 28th, the day before Sandy, with 28 kids running around the house and yard wearing costumes, picking pumpkins and laughing.
Part II: Sandy
We spent October 29th securing objects outside, fishing our turtles and koi fish out of the ponds and inside we charged electronics. We had plenty of food, ice, water etc. and we planned for being stuck in the house for a few days. Since we were already up 11 feet in elevation to the first floor, we weren’t concerned about flooding inside the house. We watched the news and weather reports, kept an eye on the weather outside and monitored the morning’s high tide. Around 3:30 pm, long before the second high tide, the water was slowly creeping up the block. As the next hour passed, the water was slowly creeping still, a few neighbors were staying, and we said good bye to the ones leaving. Around 5:30 the water was getting higher and at that point we decided to try and leave; we rounded up the kids, my mother and the dog, and Mike went outside to get his truck.
At this point the water at the street level was neck deep and a current was ripping through it. We were stuck! We moved the kids, my mom (who was 3 weeks post-op from having half of her right kidney removed from cancer), and the dog upstairs to the second floor. Mike and I scurried around the first floor, grabbing important documents and placing them in Ziploc bags. The water had not yet reached all the way up the front steps, so we knew it was time to shut down the electric breaker and gas.
All of a sudden the water started rushing in from all corners of the house and it was coming in fast. We ran up stairs and stared in awe as the water rose, and waves went through our kitchen. We looked out the windows and watched waves clear our 6 foot stockade fence in the backyard and wash away our above ground pool we had just put up 3 months prior.
At this point we prayed the water would stop rising. We began smell an odd odor and we thought maybe it was a combination of the different candles we were using. Then the odor became overwhelming.
The water inside the house turned red. We were so frightened and had no clue what was going on. We retreated to Ethan’s bedroom upstairs at the front of the house, we closed the door, blocked off the vents, and opened the windows to breathe. We hovered around the window to get fresh air because the fumes were beyond nauseating. From the window you could hear the screams and cries of people for help, but it was so dark you couldn’t see anything. It was impossible to see where the water ended. We flashed flashlights from window to window of our neighbors to make sure they were ok and waited for their flashlights to flashback.
The night was very long and scary, waking the kids up every half hour to make sure they were still breathing and coherent. The time seemed to stand still. Finally at around 4:00 am we were able to escape. We carefully treaded downstairs and across the floors, slipping and sliding from what we later learned was home heating fuel oil, which had come from tanks that washed off of other residents houses and on to our property. We retreated to a neighbors house and were so grateful to have all made it through. We made out of the house with literally the clothes on our backs and an overnight bag for the kids. Our neighbors brought to our attention that we smelled of diesel. After inhaling the fumes all night, we didn’t realize we reeked of it. Our house was a toxic wasteland, the tanks had discharged approximately 225 gallons of #2 heating fuel throughout our home and our yard.









