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After Sandy, New York's new normal
by
Nov 1, 2012
It's been three days since Sandy hit New York City and as residents wake up this morning, the city is still staggering back to normal.
The overlooked benefits of renters insurance
by
Nov 1, 2012
Insurance claims from Sandy will reach an estimated $15 billion. But many people will have to cover damage to their household possessions because they don't have renters insurance.
Apple's executive shakeup, and tech challenges after a storm halts transportation
by
Oct 31, 2012
With New York City's Mayor Bloomberg warning it could be the days before subway trains are restored, what are the other options for the millions of people that use the transit system on a typical day?
'This little rainstorm is not going to stop New York'
by
Oct 31, 2012
A New Yorker tells us about the commute into Manhattan today, after Superstorm Sandy.
Lower Manhattan flickers back to life
by
Oct 31, 2012
Despite the loss of power in lower Manhattan, Wall Street and some nearby businesses reopen. But downtown is dead compared to midtown.
Campaigns reboot after Sandy
by
Oct 31, 2012
Election officials in storm-stricken counties scramble ahead of voting day.
Flooded engines: Sandy soaked a lot of cars
by
Oct 31, 2012
Insurers want to repair flooded cars rather than declare them a total loss. But water damage can show up later -- and flooding claims will show up on services like Carfax, taking down what a vehicle can get on the used-car market.
Sandy as marketing tool
by
Oct 31, 2012
Companies walk a fine line between compassion and commercialism when it comes to disasters.
Benefits from Sandy shutting down the market
Interview by
Oct 31, 2012
Trading in U.S. stocks resumed today after two days off. A storm has not shut down trading for this long since 1888.
More than flipping a switch: Power companies fight outages
by
Oct 31, 2012
Electricity is coming back for those who lost power because of Sandy. Two days after the storm, about six million people on the East Coast are still in the dark, down from a high of eight and a half million.












