Insurance woes, contractor problems, and more are part of island life on Sanibel Island one year after Hurricane Ian. Reporter Katie LaGrone and Photojournalist Matthew Apthorp take you there.
we have elected candidatesacros make sure we do focus on jobs and critical challenges that we face and aren t going to divert to a social agenda. that s been a strong message ou to make sure government is working for them. patty mu day after. and adding insult to injury for this area, the nor easter is here, now picking up steam, expected to bring winds, already there is a heavy wet snow falling in thesereas on trees that could jeopardize power lines again. jim canner to is jersey, ji how long is this going to last? what s going to be the worst of it for these people who have suffered? i think we have to go through tomorrow morning to be host. in my wildest dreams i never thought i would be covering a land falling hurricane nine days ago and a snowstorm today. this is absolutely wild here.
the electronics and the equipment and actually it works again. when the power windows work. but you get saltwater in there and typically that s the end of the vehicle. and if those kind of electronics which many of them are old exist down through here they re going to have to be replaced and you start adding time on the timetable. the majority of uptown and midtown, again, getting on back line back on line tomorrow and hopefully up to full operation by the time monday rolls around. that s a good thing. back to you. thanks so much, jim canner to there. and next, coming up, new york congressman steve israel, touring the damage in his district on long island. [ male announcer ] why do more emergency workers everywhere trust duracell.?? duralock power preserve. locks in power for up to 10 years in storage. now.guaranteed. duracell with duralock. trusted everywhere.
traveling in and out of the northeast is just a mess. jfk and newark liberty airport reopened for limited flights. damage still being affected at laguardia. 19,500 flights were canceled because of the storm. 7,074 flights were canceled tuesday, 2801 flights canceled today. many new yorkers are still stranded. some without power or water, some subway stations from maine under water. the weather channel s jim canner to joins me from outside one of those submerged subway stage. how is it looking in new york? yeah, andrea. this is awful. this is the south berry subway station here. you get off the staten island ferry and some would walk through here and take the train uptown or as far as the bronx if you so choose. the problem is there s 30 to 40
d.c., baltimore, philly to new york, a slushy inch. new york city just west of new york city, when you get to higher elevations, that s a different story. northwest jersey could pick up 6 to 12 inches. poconos could have a few spots above a first. harrisburg will be changing over to snow shortly and they should get a wet, heavy 5 inches of snow. if you stay with us on msnbc, you ll see jim canner to covered in snow by noon hour. where the bull s eye is later this afternoon into tonight is up through central new england, into northern new england. this is where you re not going to want to travel late tonight for any reason. manchester, as much as 10 inches of snow. springfield, 8. hartford, 8. through the cat skills, newberg, poughkeepsie could see over a foot of snow and is that will knock out a lot of power. not worried about high elevations. most of your leaves are gone. the valley floors, you get this much snow with leaves on the tree, we ll have a couple hundred, maybe a million pe