Storm was cruel to elderly who refused to evacuate
Topics: From the Wires, News
Kate Traina, 14, looks over the rumble of her grandparents house in Staten Island, N.Y., Friday, Nov. 2, 2012. A Superstorm Sandy relief fund is being created just for residents of the hard-hit New York City borough. Former Mayor Rudolph Giuliani and Borough President James Molinaro say the fund will help residents displaced from their homes. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)(Credit: AP)NEW YORK (AP) — Even with her Coney Island apartment squarely in the path of Superstorm Sandy, Loraine Gore was staying put. At age 90, she said, she had her reasons.
“I’m tired,” she told a friend who urged her to evacuate. “I don’t want to go.”
After floodwaters subsided, Gore’s body was found face-down in her home — one of nearly a dozen New Yorkers over the age of 65 who perished in the storm.
While Sandy claimed victims as young as toddlers, it was crueler to the city’s elderly.
Some were vulnerable because of poor health. The power failure cut off the oxygen supply for an ailing 75-year woman living in Manhattan’s East Village. Her grandson rushed to a nearby hospital to get a manual tank, but by the time he returned, she had died from an apparent heart attack.
Others died fleeing the storm. On Wednesday, police discovered the bodies of an 89-year-old man and his 66-year-old wife next to their car in a vacant lot on Staten Island. Police believe the couple died after their car became submerged in water.
Most drowned alone in bedrooms, living rooms and basements that flooded.
One 84-year-old victim in Queens was confined to a wheelchair, meaning she probably couldn’t have fled the rising water. But other older victims weren’t homebound. They chose to stay and risk their lives, perhaps too stubborn or too weary to do otherwise.
Another was 82-year-old Jimmy Rossi, known as “Uncle Jimmy” because so many people in his tight-knit Staten Island community are related. Rossi lived in a beach bungalow and spent much of his time tending to his aging bulldog, Shorty.
As the water began to rise Monday night, neighbors assumed Rossi had heeded calls to head for higher ground. A niece heard through a friend that he was going to his son’s house. He told his son he was going to a friend’s.
But when the storm eased Tuesday, it became increasingly clear Rossi had done neither.
Rossi’s son, Joe, his nephew and some neighbors used a kayak to break the windows of his submerged home in a frantic, failed search. On Wednesday, his body was found in the marsh behind his house, where Shorty had survived.
Neighbor Richard Quinn, a retired firefighter, speculated that Rossi had left the house to escape the rising water but got swept up in it.
“Like the rest of us, he probably figured it wasn’t going to be as bad as it was,” said Quinn, who has lived across the street for 50 years. “It was like a tsunami coming.”




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