The area located in Bergen County was hit with the tidal surge between midnight and 1:30 a.m. giving residents almost no warning. The surge came after the brunt of the storm had passed. Sandy had dropped below hurricane status just before it hit the coast further south in New Jersey on Monday evening.
"From start to finish this wall of water, in some places a wave much higher than five feet, hit this unprepared area. The full impact was felt in less than 30 minutes," said Jeanne Baratta, chief of the Bergen County Executive.
"There are probably more than 2,000 residents affected by this and a lot do not realize they cannot go back home tonight," Baratta told Reuters by telephone.
Initially there was confusion as to what actually happened with speculation the river had overflowed its banks countered by early reports from the New Jersey State Police that a levee had in fact broken in the borough of Moonachie.
There were no immediate reports of any fatalities and rescue workers have taken out several hundred residents from the danger zone to temporary shelters. Others left of their own accord.
"They are wet and they are cold and they have lost their homes and their property. It is very sad," Baratta said.
"We are in rescue mode," she said, adding that the three towns had been "devastated" by the flood waters.
While low tides might pull some of the extra volume of water out of the area, officials were concerned it would all come flooding back with the upcoming high tide on Tuesday evening, leaving conditions unsafe for residents.
Baratta described a scene of house-to-house searching by rescue teams using boats and trucks to move residents to safety at a nearby school in Teterboro. Teterboro is home to a regional airport heavily used by corporate jets and smaller aircraft.
(Reporting By Daniel Bases and Edward Krudy; Editing by Claudia Parsons)
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