Breezy Point in the New York borough of Queens some two months after Superstrom Sandy.<br/> <br />Many house have been abadoned.<br/> <br />Some people will never come back.<br/> <br />Cody Doran is working on his grandmother's house. It was flooded in three feet of water.<br/> <br />His family was promised $30,000 in relief money. They have only have seen $12,000 of it.<br/> <br />(SOUNDBITE) (English) CODY DORAN, HOMEOWNER'S GRANDSON, SAYING:<br/> <br />"My grandmother has been displaced since Hurricane Sandy. And it is a concern that there is a hold up in the funding. This is a strong middle class working area and we pay our taxes. It's time that the people in this community in Breezy Point see some of that support from the government."<br/> <br />Funding to help the voictoims of Sandy has been caught in a political storm.<br/> <br />On Friday the House of Representatives approved 9.7 billion in initial relief funds.<br/> <br />(SOUNDBITE) (English) JOE MORAN, OWNER OF DESTROYED HOME, SAYING:<br/> <br />"But it was all political shifting and that's not fair to us. We are the ones suffering from all of this you know."<br/> <br />Later this month the House will vote on the rest of the 60 billion relief package.<br/> <br />Which may be cold comfort for those still suffering in the aftermath.
