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Staten Island, N.Y., Nov. 12, 2012 -- Flooding as high as four-feet in the interior areas of Oceanside in the New York area flooded homes ruining furniture, carpeting, and drywall. If not removed, the wet furniture and drywall, etc., attracts unhealthy mold, so residents must remove the water soaked items from their homes. Walt Jennings/FEMA

Staten Island, N.Y., Nov. 10, 2012 -- Rising flood waters in the Midway Beach area of Staten Island in New York caused hundreds of homes to have flooded basements, and anywhere from a foot to 6 ft of water in their homes, and when water recedes, water soaked building materials must be removed before mold has a chance to grow. Walt Jennings/FEMA

Flooding ^ Severe Storm - Memphis, Tenn. , May 26, 2011 -- Three weeks after water entered this home, the mold growth is significant (note washing machine hookup for scale). FEMA Hazard Mitigation specialists are at Lowe's and Home Depots providing answers to question about the dangers of mold and cleanup techniques. Marilee Caliendo/FEMA

Flooding ^ Severe Storm - Nashville, Tenn. , May 24, 2010 -- After flood waters recede, dangerous mold spores can begin to grow within 24 to 48 hours on a varity of household surfaces. FEMA and local health officials are providing mold remediation information to the public. Martin Grube/FEMA

Flooding ^ Severe Storm - Memphis, Tenn. , May 28, 2011 -- Mold grows everywhere in this manufactured home. FEMA mitigation teams are emphatic about the dangers of mold and have precautionary information available at local Lowe's and Home Depots. Marilee Caliendo/FEMA

Staten Island, N.Y., Nov. 3, 2012 -- Water levels as a result of Hurricane Sandy rose as high as eight feet in this home on Staten Island, New York, ruining carpeting, furniture, the furnace, washer and dryer, and numerous other household and personal items. Walt Jennings/FEMA

Des Plaines, Ill., April 30, 2013 --A house swollen by flood waters from the nearby Des Plains river has been gutted from the basement to the first floor to prevent the dispersement of mold and other complications. Many homes, businesses and roads were damaged and compromised due to severe flash flooding on April 18 and more than 7 inches of rain fell in parts of northeast and central Illinois. Bryan Adams/ FEMA Corps

Flooding ^ Severe Storm - Memphis, Tenn. , May 26, 2011 -- Three weeks after water entered this home, the mold growth is significant. FEMA Hazard Mitigation specialists are at Lowe's and Home Depots in the damaged counties to provide information on mold dangers and on cleanup techniques. Marilee Caliendo/FEMA

Staten Island, N.Y., Nov. 10, 2012 -- Many residents of Midland Beach on Staten Island, N.Y., lost all of their clothing when Hurricane Sandy pushed waters as high as 9 feet over the beach and into their homes Oct. 29, 2012. Nearby residents rose to the cause and donated bags full of clothing to the survivors who now had very little. Walt Jennings/FEMA

N.Y., Nov. 12, 2012 -- Rising water as high as four feet in the interior areas of homes in the Oceanside area of the New York flooded homes, ruining furniture, carpeting, and drywall. If not removed, the wet items attracts unhealthy mold, so residents had to remove the water soaked items from their homes. Walt Jennings/FEMA

description

Summary

The original finding aid described this as:

Date Taken: 2012-11-12 00:00:00 UTC

Photographer Name: Walter Jennings

City/State: NY

Keywords: Assistance ^ Storm ^ Home ^ Recovery ^ Disaster ^ Flooding ^ Hurricane ^ Tropical ^ House ^ FEMA ^ Debris ^ sandy ^ Relief ^ New York ^ rising water ^ Red Cross ^ dhs

Disasters: New York Hurricane Sandy (DR-4085)

Disaster Types: Coastal Storm ^ Flooding

Categories: Debris ^ Individual Assistance ^ Miscellaneous ^ Mitigation ^ Operations ^ Recovery

Photographs Relating to Disasters and Emergency Management Programs, Activities, and Officials

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water four feet areas homes oceanside oceanside area new york furniture drywall items mold residents walt jennings fema high resolution ultra high resolution disaster new york hurricane sandy disaster types debris recovery photographs walt jennings walter jennings photographer name individual assistance coastal storm emergency management programs assistance storm recovery hurricane us national archives
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Date

2012
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United States Department of Homeland Security
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https://catalog.archives.gov/
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label_outline Explore Four Feet, Drywall, Walter Jennings

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Milford, Conn., Nov. 27, 2012 -- Bags have been put together by a scout troop, filled with small needed items for those who have lost so much. FEMA Disaster Recovery Centers offer such items that have been donated, in addition to information of registering for assistance with FEMA. Photo by Marilee Caliendo/FEMA

[Assignment: 59-CF-SA-4881J-03] Department facilities views, for Web use: Employee Services Center, Harry S. Truman Building [Photographer: Mark Stewart--State] [59-CF-SA-4881J-03_ESCweb31.jpg]

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Topics

water four feet areas homes oceanside oceanside area new york furniture drywall items mold residents walt jennings fema high resolution ultra high resolution disaster new york hurricane sandy disaster types debris recovery photographs walt jennings walter jennings photographer name individual assistance coastal storm emergency management programs assistance storm recovery hurricane us national archives