patching...
Breaking: Bayville Man Stabbed Saturday Night in Seaside Heights Has Been Released; Suspect Still At Large »
Welcome back, Patch Blogger!

UPDATE: Sandy’s Costs Add Up For Brick

Hurricane Sandy has cost Brick more than $2.1 million in overtime during a three-week period and the damage to roads, bulkheads and other infrastructure is initially estimated at $15 million to $20 million, the township's business administrator said.

 

Hurricane Sandy’s tab for Brick Township employee overtime has topped $2.166 million in the first three weeks after the late-October storm, while infrastructure damage costs are initially estimated between $15 million and $20 million, Township Business Administrator Scott M. Pezarras said.

Township officials said Tuesday night that its Hurricane Sandy costs are estimated at $53 million.

James F. Lacey, executive director of the Brick Township Municipal Utilities Authority, said Wednesday morning that repairs to the water and sewer system are initially estimated at an additional $3.5 million, most of which will be reimbursed by FEMA.

Police accounted for more than half of the overtime costs since they had to increase continuous patrols in the barrier island portion of the township, with 20 officers and 30 National Guardsman on patrol to ward off looters.  They were supplemented with 12 to 16 public works employees handling debris cleanup, Pezarras told Patch.com on Tuesday.

Overtime had outpaced salaries for the first payroll in November, just after the storm hit, Pezarras said.  Approximately $1.3 million in police overtime was accounted for, while another $479,000 was dedicated to the department of public works, he said.

Pezarras said the township has been tracking overtime associated with Hurricane Sandy in a separate account, since the Federal Emergency Management Agency reimburses local governments for their disaster-related costs.

 “We expect the overtime for public works and parks to shrink in the future from the storm, but there will still be overtime for the police until the utilities are turned back on (on the barrier islands),” Pezarras said.

The public works department is leaving the role of debris removal to Ashbritt Inc., which has a contract with Ocean County.

Pezarras said Brick, like many other municipalities affected by Sandy, are resorting to short-term borrowing to cover emergency costs.  Ocean County's contract for debris removal is allowing towns to reduce spending plans associated with Hurricane Sandy, Pezarras said.  On Tuesday, Township Council approved cutting an emergency spending authorization by $10.5 million to $7.5 million because of the county assuming most debris removal costs.

40 Sinkholes 

The $15 million to $20 million estimate to Brick's infrastructure is preliminary, Pezarras said.  Township engineers will need to do a more extensive survey of the bulkheads, docks and parks to have a final cost estimate, he said.

More than 40 sinkholes have developed in Hurricane Sandy's aftermath, Pezarras said. 

Related Topics: Brick, Brick Public Works, Brick Township news, Hurricane Sandy, and brick police

type writer

5:54 pm on Tuesday, December 4, 2012

The Mayors friend Juan Bellu, does not see any more emergencies happening in the immediate future. He actually said this one time when trying to justify spending the tax payers surplus on his and Stevies pet projects.

Juan Bellu Steve and then Steve Bellu Juan. They both gave each other jobs. One in brick and one in Toms River.

Reply

Chief Wahoo

8:12 pm on Tuesday, December 4, 2012

how much has the new Council saved taxpayers this year ???

Reply
Comment_arrow

lifelonginbrick

8:11 am on Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Yes the town councel caused hurricane Sandy - they are that powerful.

Brick

11:38 pm on Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Question I want answered is the 5 weeks Bellu was out of work did he receive a paycheck? Because theres no way he accumulated that much time off in 3 years. And did he get overtime working from home during that time period?

Reply

KC

12:56 am on Wednesday, December 5, 2012

No talk of laying off public works this year!

Reply
Comment_arrow

Tarkus

12:23 pm on Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Wait three weeks and we'll see about that!

WMS826

1:11 am on Wednesday, December 5, 2012

How about everything free to every Sandy survivor for life.

Reply

Leave a comment

 

The Brick Patch
Valentine's Shopping Guide

See the full guide!

Patch Picks