Dec. 02--ATLANTIC CITY -- People are still coming by the White House Sub Shop, stepping over the lumber, ignoring the closed signs, and expecting a cheesesteak.
But the White House, like many iconic businesses at the Shore, not to mention a few Wawas and CVSes, is still down for the count from Sandy.
"We got ripped," said owner Brian Conley. Waves of water flowing down Mississippi and Arctic Avenues flooded the cellar up to the ceiling and into the ground floor.
With all its operating equipment down there -- heating, electric -- this landmark "Home of Submarines" -- is still two weeks from reopening. Another kind of submarine might have come in handy.
"We couldn't get here until the Thursday after the storm," Conley said, echoing a frustration many business owners faced after Sandy struck Oct. 29. "It was off-limits."
Just up the street, at the equally legendary Angelo's Fairmount Tavern, waves also lapped into the first floor, but Angelo's -- through a little luck, some available day workers, and a wave through the barricades by a state trooper the day after the storm -- managed to open the Saturday after the storm.
"I gave him my business card, and the state trooper said: 'Listen, I love your place. Go through,' " said Angelo Mancuso, the tavern's third-generation owner. (His father, Sonny, would have been proud but not surprised.)
Contrary to speculation, that notorious basin that runs along the base of the bar in front of the stools -- historically certified, mind you -- did not save Angelo's from worse flooding.
Those drains lead into the street again, Mancuso said. (They were built to drain ice from the beer taps -- most people assume they're to save men a trip to the restroom.)
Not that too many people were around to enjoy the linguine and crab, a problem that persists to some extent for businesses that have reopened. "We were open, but I probably could have stayed closed," Mancuso said.
Businesses hurt by Sandy included favorite spots like Steve & Cookie's and Tomatoe's, both in Margate, and Yianni's in Ocean City, all hoping to reopen in the next week; the Heritage Surf Shops and Kubell's Too in Beach Haven -- where the very thought of their going through tough times made some regulars cry (Steve & Cookie's) and others vow to fly in from California for reopening (White House, mid-December).
T-shirts piled high
They also included the obscure and quirky -- but no less beloved -- like the so-called bong lady at the back of the Silver Sun Mall on Long Beach Island, where mounds of colorful but ruined T-shirts were piled up high on the sidewalk last week. On LBI, bait shops, real estate and doctors' offices, ice cream and hair salons were swamped. Wawas in Margate and Ocean City are still closed.
Whole blocks of commercial stores saw inventory and property wiped out by flooding -- Ventnor Avenue, near Washington in Margate, some parts of Asbury Avenue, pretty much the entire commercial strip of Long Beach Township and Beach Haven.
"I'm afraid some of the smaller operators may decide their loss was such that they cannot recover and they will not return," said Deb Whitcraft, a former mayor of Beach Haven and owner of the Maritime Museum.
"The small businesses are the culture of the island," added New Jersey Assemblywoman Dianne Gove, who lives on LBI. Others, like Long Beach Township Police Chief Michael Bradley, worried about the long-term, and year-round, impact on the fragile island.
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News Column
Sandy Brings a Flood of Cleanup Headaches to Signature Shore Businesses
Dec. 2, 2012
Amy S. Rosenberg
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