More than two weeks after Hurricane Sandy ripped through the U.S. Northeast and claimed the lives of at least 121 people, pumps continue to work at maximum capacity to help clean up and restore the devastated areas. Sandy, later upgraded to a superstorm, caused an estimated $50 billion in property damage and economic losses and ranks as one of the most destructive natural disasters to ever hit the region. Causing the most damage was a ruthless, wind-driven wall of water that swept in at high tide and engulfed low-lying areas of New York and New Jersey. Several pump companies deployed equipment to the flooded areas immediately after the storm made landfall near Atlantic City, N.J., on Oct. 29. Some pumps were deployed earlier, in anticipation of Sandy’s arrival. The day after the storm hit, Mersino and its manufacturing sister company, Global Pump, had dozens of skilled, OSHA-trained pump operators on the ground and had mobilized hundreds of pumps and generators to provide immediate relief. Mersino did not rent any pumps. Instead, it supplied power and dewatering services to municipalities, emergency response contractors, individual private businesses and restoration contractors.
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