New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie trumpets his post-Superstorm Sandy rebuilding effort as the crowning achievement of his first term. But are some New Jersey residents being left out of the Republican governor’s “Stronger than the Storm” vision?
According to data released by the Fair Share Housing Center (FSHC), African-American and Latino residents have been rejected by New Jersey’s housing recovery programs at a higher rate than their white counterparts. The data can be found here.
After a prolonged legal battle with the Christie administration to gain access to the Hurricane Sandy recovery demographic information, FSHC determined that the Resettlement Program rejected 40.7% of African-Americans, and 22.8% of Latinos compared with 14.9% of white residents of the same low and middle income status. The state’s Reconstruction, Rehabilitation, Elevation and Mitigation (RREM) program showed similar numbers.
Adam Gordon, an attorney for FSHC, partly attributes the discrepancy to the Christie administration’s failure to reach black and Latino communities. “The lack of outreach on the state’s programs for relief is in sharp contrast to the ‘Stronger than the Storm’ ads which were everywhere.”









