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Storm Refugees Struggle To Rebound In Times Square

The DoubleTree Hotel sits on one of the loudest and glitziest corners of Times Square. It's where enamored 9-year-old Isaiah Douglas has been staying with his mom, dad and little sister.

"It has been a great experience," Isaiah says. But the family isn't there on vacation.

Their story emerges in an elevator as a hotel guest strikes up a friendly conversation with Isaiah's mom, Natisha Laws.

"Where are you from?" the tourist asks.

"I'm from here. I'm from New York. We're with FEMA because of the Hurricane Sandy."

The tourist dramatically gasps, "Did you lose your house?"

"Yeah. We lost everything," Laws replies.

Before Superstorm Sandy, the family was living on the first floor of a rented apartment in Far Rockaway in the borough of Queens. The building was sandwiched between the bay and the ocean, and it flooded when Sandy hit.

Isaiah's dad, Mark Douglas, says they couldn't salvage much of their belongings after the storm.

"The couches, the fridge is in the living room," Douglas says. "Everything is everywhere now."

Eventually, they ended up at an evacuation shelter in the Bronx, and in mid-November, a bus brought them, along with many others, to their current hotel.

Adjusting To A New Reality

According to the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which is responsible for providing temporary shelter to Sandy refugees, people from about 5,000 displaced households are staying in hotels in New York and New Jersey.

Natisha Laws and her partner, Mark Douglas, inside the Times Square hotel room where they've been staying since mid-November. The tourist hot spot is exciting for 3-year-old Tru and 9-year-old Isaiah, but their parents say they are stressed out and worry the family will end up homeless.
/ Cindy Rodriguez for NPR
/
Cindy Rodriguez for NPR
Natisha Laws and her partner, Mark Douglas, inside the Times Square hotel room where they've been staying since mid-November. The tourist hot spot is exciting for 3-year-old Tru and 9-year-old Isaiah, but their parents say they are stressed out and worry the family will end up homeless.

By New York City standards, the family's hotel room is large, but it's still cramped for a family of four with a toddler. There's a small sitting room with a sofa, but no kitchenette. Boxes of cereal sit on a countertop. A frozen dinner is left inside the minifridge.

The window views are of Manhattan high-rises and a flashing billboard for the musical Mamma Mia.

"When we saw this, we couldn't believe it, actually," Douglas says.

But six weeks later, the 26-year-old says reality set in and optimism wore off.

FEMA provided Laws and Douglas with $4,900, which they've spent almost all of on food, transportation and replacing clothes.

"Everything around here is real expensive," he says. "We can't afford none of this stuff, so we basically go to Walgreens, and we purchase what we could off the food stamps, because that's basically the only place around here that will take that."

Douglas says that even before the storm, his young family was struggling. Natisha and the kids moved to Far Rockaway to be with him in September. But he lost his job not long after, and the storm set him back even more.

Their only possessions are a garbage bag full of clothes that sits in the corner, a mobile DVD player and a small laptop computer.

Adding to the family's anxiety is a soon-to-be born baby — Laws is eight months pregnant.

"She's [Laws] stressed out," Douglas says. "She don't know what's going to be the next step, so I try to keep her calm at the same time, the kids calm at the same time, [and] figure out everything that's going to commence for the duration."

For Isaiah, keeping calm involves trips to the Toys R Us store down the street with its gigantic indoor Ferris wheel.

"It's like you're all interested in the same thing, and then we all start talking about the prices and stuff, and then we go home, and there's no fighting or anything," he says.

But Laws says it doesn't take long for her worries to return. The family has no income. Isaiah's been shuffled from one school to another, missing many days. And FEMA has given all families until Jan. 12 to check out, but Laws says the hotel wants them out by Sunday.

"You never know what's supposed to happen once you leave this beautiful hotel," Laws says. "Like where do you go after that? Do you become part of the shelter system? Do you become part of New York homeless? What comes after FEMA stops helping or Red Cross stops helping?"

Laws worries that Sandy will recede in the public's mind — and that her family will be soon forgotten.

Copyright 2020 WNYC Radio. To see more, visit WNYC Radio.

Cindy Rodriguez
KCUR serves the Kansas City region with breaking news and award-winning podcasts.
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