US | Hurricane Sandy Human Waste Still Spewing Into NY Harbor Post-Sandy Repairs still not complete at NJ sewage plant By Mark Russell Posted Nov 16, 2012 8:40 AM CST Copied Hundreds of feet from the beach, a large section of the boardwalk is entangled with vehicles in the Rockaway Park section of the borough of Queens, New York, Monday, Nov. 5, 2012, in the wake of Superstorm Sandy. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle) Just when you thought Hurricane Sandy stories couldn't get any worse: The nation's fifth-largest sewage treatment plant, located in Newark, still hasn't been fully repaired after being hit by a 12-foot wave during the storm. So 18 days later, it continues to pump millions of gallons of partially treated human waste daily into New York Harbor, close to the Statue of Liberty, reports NBC New York. There is still no target date when the sewage plant might be fully operational again, with a senior official saying only "ASAP." In less depressing Sandy news, the scrap wood from storm-damaged Rockaway Beach Boardwalk is proving quite valuable for salvagers—a block-long section of boardwalk wood could fetch up to $250,000, reports New York. And one New Jersey woman found a collection of love letters that are more than 60 years old on the beach, reports Fox News. "It's magical. This can't be real," said a niece of the woman who wrote the letters. Read These Next Cops arrest trio in viral airport dustup over baggage fee. Army suspends 2 crews over Kid Rock's strange helicopter videos. President Trump has some harsh words for the UK, France, and NATO. Trump signs executive order to take control of mail-in voting. Report an error