NJ hotel to pay $64,000 in Sandy gouging case

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Wednesday, August 20, 2014
Superstorm Sandy
In this October 2012 satellite photo provided by NOAA, Hurricane Sandy swirls off the Mid-Atlantic coastline (AP/NOAA)
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EGG HARBOR TWP, N.J. -- A hotel in southern New Jersey has agreed to pay $64,000 to settle allegations of price gouging in the wake of Superstorm Sandy.

Amy Hotels did business as Econo Lodge in Egg Harbor Township.

State officials claimed the company raised its room rates by as much as 150 percent to $199.99 per night after Gov. Chris Christie declared a state of emergency in advance of Sandy making landfall. The rooms cost $79.99 per night before the declaration.

New Jersey's price gouging law prohibits excessive price increases during a declared state of emergency for merchandise used as a direct result of an emergency or used to protect the life, health, safety or comfort of persons or their property.

Nearly $25,000 from the settlement will be for consumer restitution.