Posted on Dec 9, 2002

100,000 homes still lack power

Still no power at the Pearce abode. Naturally, it takes just as long to restore power to three or four customers as it takes to get 100 homes restored. And since our home is one of only two homes that receives power from the main lines up the street, we’ll likley be one of the last to have power restored.

According to mom and dad, it took crews nine days to restore power after hurricane Fran. Hopefully, this storm won’t take as long, for waking up in 30 degree temperatures is getting old.

Here?s a local news story covering our current conditions:

newsandobserver.com
Darkness persists across Triangle
By RICHARD STRADLING, Staff Writer

More than 100,000 Triangle homes and businesses still lack power today, four days after an ice storm Thursday, and most schools opened late or remained closed, lengthening the misery of families hungry for normalcy and electricity.

CP&L had said late Sunday afternoon that it would have the vast majority of customers in Wake County restored by midnight. But by Monday morning, 32,000 still lacked power in Wake. As of 5:30 a.m., Duke Power Co. reported about 59,000 outages in Durham, 21,800 in Chapel Hill and 7,900 in Morrisville.

CP&L spokeswoman Julie Hans said crews were surprised by the number of homes with individual lines down.

“They just found so many lines yesterday afternoon and through the night that needed individual attention,” Hans said.

Hans said the repair process has slowed considerably: it now takes as long to restore power to three or four customers as it took to get 100 back on a couple of days ago. The number of outages in Wake County peaked Thursday afternoon at 265,000.

Smarting from criticism that they were slow to respond, Duke Power Co. officials said the storm was the worst in the company’s history. They said they had restored power to more than 725,000 customers in the Carolinas since Thursday and noted that it took 10 days to restore the same number of outages after a 1996 ice storm.

State officials blamed at least two more deaths on the storm Sunday, including that of a 7-year-old boy who died in a Carrboro house fire before dawn. About 650,000 homes and businesses across North Carolina were still without power as of noon Sunday, meaning power crews were only about halfway done repairing damage from the storm.

Durham, Chapel Hill, Orange, Chatham and Franklin schools are closed again today, and all but two Wake schools will start two hours late. Johnston County schools will hold classes at regular times. All Wake County schools will return to normal time on Tuesday.

Wake officials decided Sunday evening that a late start would ensure that schools have time to warm buildings. “That two-hour delay gives us a window of opportunity to make sure we have a safe environment for the kids,” spokesman Michael Evans said.

Two Wake schools — Underwood Elementary School and Centennial Middle School — will remain closed today, but will resume a normal schedule on Tuesday, along with all other Wake schools.

Many parents will welcome the late start, but Apex High School students Jasmine Harrell and Jessica Goodman were hoping for another day off. On a trip to Crabtree Valley Mall on Sunday, the girls said they knew they would have to make up missed days later.

“But for now we’re really enjoying it,” said Jasmine, a 17-year-old senior from Fuquay-Varina. “We’ve been just chillin’.”

Durham officials were not sure when their schools would reopen. About 18 Durham schools lacked power Sunday night, and two others were being used as shelters, spokesman Michael Yarbrough said.

Chapel Hill-Carrboro school officials expect to reopen Tuesday and have set makeup dates: Jan. 21, March 14 and March 28. Three of 14 Chapel Hill-Carrboro schools lacked power Sunday night, but officials decided to wait another day, spokeswoman Kim Hoke said.

“There are some reports of downed power lines, and Duke Power does not recommend our opening tomorrow,” Hoke said.

All 11 Orange County schools have power, but officials decided to keep them closed today because of poor road conditions, particularly in rural areas. Officials don’t know yet when schools will reopen or how students will make up lost days, interim superintendent Mike Williams said.

State officials said Sunday the storm had claimed at least five lives, including that of a Florida Power & Light Co. worker killed Sunday when his utility truck ran off the road near Lincolnton. Three people have died from carbon monoxide poisoning in homes where charcoal grills or gasoline-powered generators were used indoors.

N.C. National Guardsmen had knocked on more than 10,000 doors by Sunday evening, checking for people who needed help with heat, medicine, food or transportation.

Gov. Mike Easley sent about 245 Guard members to assist local emergency officials in 20 counties, including Wake, Durham and Orange.

The powerless will continue to improvise today, tending fireplaces or portable heaters or seeking refuge from their cold, dark homes in shelters and hotels or with friends or family.

In Durham County, nearly 700 people showed up at the county’s four shelters Saturday night, and county officials planned to keep two open Sunday night and today. In Wake County, fewer than 135 people sought refuge Saturday night, and county officials kept only one shelter open Sunday.

Those with power may now wonder when their routines will be restored. When will the guests sleeping on the couch go home? When will the cable TV come back?

About 60 percent of Time Warner Cable’s 330,000 Triangle customers were back in business Sunday, with the heaviest outages in Durham, Chapel Hill and Hillsborough, said Brad Phillips, vice president for public affairs. Time Warner crews and about 270 outside contractors expect to repair as many as 10,000 downed cable lines in the Triangle region, Phillips said.

Signs of recovery were everywhere Sunday. More traffic lights functioned, though few had been re-timed to smooth traffic flow. People continued to stack limbs and debris along curbs in hopes that someone, sometime, will take it all away.

But it was still possible to turn down a side street and come upon a scene that looked as though the storm had just barreled through. A felled oak, apparently suspended in a set of utility lines, created a bridge over Raleigh’s Gardner Street just high enough to let one car pass underneath at a time.

Forecasters offered Triangle residents and utility crews some good news: Earlier talk of another ice storm this week proved unfounded. The National Weather Service said it might rain Tuesday, but temperatures should remain well above freezing.

Posted on Dec 6, 2002

Sheets of ice

Winter arrived to the Raleigh, North Carolina, area Wednesday afternoon as storms delivered sheets of ice that sent trees falling across streets and power lines.

At the Pearce home front, numerous trees snapped in half or fell altogether due to the weight of the ice. Four fell across our driveway while three others took a dip in our lake. Dad and I spent Thursday clearing limbs so that our house can gain access with the main road.

We are also left without power or water. Since our house is well-driven, no power also means no water. The phone lines, however, are intact.

On Thursday evening, dad and I ventured out to find a warm meal. Much of the city, however, was still in the dark. We eventually found a Burger King that had power. Unfortunately, so did everyone else, for it took us 25 minutes just to get through the line, which weaved throughout the entire restaurant.

After dinner, the family played cards by candlelight while huddled around the woodstove for warmth.

Friday morning (this morning) was still without electricity, heat, or water. Knowing that my grandmother in a nearby retirement community would likely have her electricity restored by now, we drove over for warm showers and a little warmth.

Despite the cold conditions, the last few days reminded me of what life was like in Guyana. Power there was usually available, but it would cut on and off throughout the week as random blackouts would occur. Water, however, was less predictable, for it would turn on only twice a day.

Unlike Guyana, however, our current conditions are only temporary, for in a matter of days, power, heat, water, Internet access, and life in general will return to normal. So normal, that by next week, we will be taking these modern-day luxuries for granted once again.

Here?s a local news story covering our current conditions:

newsandobserver.com
Power out for 500,000
By JAY PRICE, RICHARD STRADLING AND MOLLY HENNESSY-FISKE, Staff Writers
Photos found here

About a half million Triangle homes and businesses still lacked power Friday morning, after falling tree branches overnight created new outages as fast as utility crews could restore the old ones.

Power crews hope that sun and warming temperatures will give them the upper hand Friday. But new outages are possible, as tree branches shed their ice and snap back into power lines, said Mike Hughes, spokesman for CP&L.

“We would expect the numbers to fluctuate throughout the day,” Hughes said.

About 347,000 CP&L customers in the Triangle were without power at 8 a.m. The company had about 1,400 people working to remove tree limbs and restore power, including crews from nine states, Hughes said.

Duke Power reported 109,000 customers in Durham and 39,000 in Chapel Hill still lacked electricity as of 6 a.m. In all more than 1 million Duke Power customers were without power in the Carolinas.

Both utilities say it could be several days before everyone has electricity again.

Across North Carolina, the state Highway Patrol responded to about 800 traffic accidents in 24 hours, Gov. Mike Easley’s office said. Four people died in crashes. One state trooper was injured in Wilkes County while responding to an accident.

Schools and universities were closed; local governments including Raleigh, Durham County and Chapel Hill declared states of emergency, and power was out even in about 30 prisons.

Schools in Durham, Johnston, Orange and Wake counties and the Chapel Hill- Carrboro system will remain closed today.

Duke Power officials called the ice storm the worst their company had ever experienced. Just over half of the company’s 2.1 million customers in North and South Carolina were without electricity. More than 450,000 CP&L customers lost power.

“We’re going to make a lot of headway tonight and tomorrow, but we want customers to be realistic that we may still be restoring power as late as Sunday,” said Keith Poston of CP&L.

Key commuter routes, including Interstate 40, were free of ice by Thursday morning, but many residential streets remained slick after temperatures nosed just above freezing. Forecasters said side streets still would be dangerous this morning because temperatures were expected to fall into the mid-20s Thursday night.

The real thaw will be today, said meteorologist Richard Jones of the National Weather Service’s Raleigh office. The cloud cover was expected to lift and temperatures to rise into the lower 40s. Clear skies and gradual warming were expected for the weekend, with highs reaching the lower 50s by Sunday.

Power outages, downed trees and icy roads forced Durham County officials to establish a curfew until 6 a.m. today.

Durham’s state of emergency proclamation also prohibited alcohol sales and limited drinking to private homes. It barred gun sales and banned anyone except law enforcement officers from carrying a weapon outside.

For Triangle residents, the thousands of shattered trees — some blocking roads, others creasing roofs — evoked Hurricane Fran in September 1996, when falling trees left hundreds of thousands of homes without power, some for more than a week.

‘Worse than Fran’

“To say that there are a lot of trees down is the ultimate understatement of the year,” said Lt. Tim Pressley of the Chapel Hill Police Department. “This is worse than Fran.”

One difference: It was warm then. On Thursday, Durham, Orange and Wake counties, and Raleigh opened overnight emergency shelters for those without power.

For some, the realization dawned late that they could be without power for days rather than hours. Modupe B. Hassan of Durham’s Breckenridge subdivision started a mad search Thursday afternoon for some way to generate heat, stopping at hardware stores, drugstores — any place that was open.

At a True Value hardware store at Woodcraft, she was turned away again. No heaters.

Hassan threw up her arms.

“I don’t know what I’m going to do,” she said. “I guess I’ll just put three or four more blankets on me and then pray. It’s the best I can do.”

The lucky few who found heaters for sale had another hurdle: the kerosene shortage.

On Durham’s Hillsborough Road, dozens of motorists — brand new kerosene heaters in their back seats — waited to buy kerosene at a Texaco station. Little did they know the station had run out.

Vincent Allen, a 44-year-old Durham resident, parked his car and walked to the front of the line, where he discovered that he had been wasting his time. Like others, Allen was frustrated. He had already waited in line at another gas station — only to reach the pump at the moment the station lost power.

Others set out to help their neighbors. In one heavily forested northern Chapel Hill neighborhood, two men with a chainsaw took it upon themselves to clear nearly a mile of road.

“We don’t have any electricity, so we don’t have anything better to do,” said Roger Wiseman, 45.

Wiseman, who works at a bookshop, and handyman Mike Massey, 42, left their home at 7:30 a.m. to start clearing their own street, and when they finished, they just kept going. They sawed and pulled aside limbs and trunks that blocked the road every 75 yards or so.

Three hours later, they were still at it, legs plastered with wet sawdust, working their way south on Shady Lawn Road.

The extent of the damage caught many by surprise.

With forecasters calling for a half inch of ice, CP&L officials said, they thought they could weather the storm without help. But by mid-day up to an inch of ice was dragging down trees and power lines, and the company had sent word to utility crews in Georgia, Alabama, South Carolina, Florida and Virginia.

Reinforcements on call

CP&L, whose main North Carolina service area stretches from Wake County east, expected 900 outside workers to arrive by Thursday night, on top of 900 of its own people. Duke Power, dominant in the west part of North Carolina, also imported help, from 18 utilities in eight states.

All day Thursday, power crews struggled to get the upper hand as tree limbs continued to crash down. Between midnight and noon, CP&L workers restored power to 200,000 customers, but watched the outages mount until well after dawn.

“We just haven’t been able to catch up,” said spokeswoman Julie Hans.”We restored power all night long, but other customers lost power at the same time.”

Crews concentrated on lines feeding hospitals, nursing homes and other customers who need electricity to power life-support systems, such as dialysis machines. They targeted major transmission lines first, then worked down through smaller lines and substations to neighborhoods.

People who lost a power line on their property will likely be without power for two or three days, said Hans.

“Those are going to be the last ones,” she said.

Posted on Dec 6, 2002

Wooden benches and a prodigious amounts of sand

Got a great email from Peace Corps friend that I think highly of. Here are edited segements of his email:

My site now has a movie theater? sort of. I recently went to the wooden building to see the premier of Spiderman with some friends. The wooden benches, prodigious amounts of sand, yellow-patched movie screen, and unique “underwater” lilt of the sound system made it a memorable evening. Still, despite the ambiance, Spiderman is very, very cool.

We’ve heard on the news that the east coast of the U.S. is getting some snowstorms; we’re going through winter as well, albeit in the Guyanese style. The rain has been much more intense than usual: most of the time, we get a quick thirty-minute rainstorm once or twice a day; lately, we’ve had rainstorms that’ve lasted four or five days straight. Now we know why Guyanese build their houses up on stilts: the roads are flooded or have been turned into mudslides. Welcome to the rain forest. I try to use the time we’re stuck inside to catch up on personal study and reading.

Now for the fun stuff: we took a thirteen-mile hike to Tipiru Falls, a natural rock slide cut by a tributary of the Mazaruni River. Some politician a year or two ago got the good idea of turning it into a hydroelectric plant. The project failed, leaving cement columns and rusting steel pipes in the main water chute, but it also left a reservoir at the top that makes a perfect spot to swim. Along the way, we saw toucans flying, a house where every brick was decorated with the Nike swoosh, a tree full of huge vultures, a giant termite nest, grasshoppers that looked like they were wearing war-paint, and we heard monkeys singing.

For Thanksgiving, we accepted an invitation from the U.S. Ambassador to have dinner at his home, along with about thirty other Peace Corps volunteers and Embassy people. There was real turkey and cranberry sauce, and one lady from the Embassy even made pecan pie from ingredients she found in Guyana. It was nearly as good as the pie from the James River Pie Company from home, and having it surrounded by friends made it that much better.

The big news of the months is that, after Thanksgiving, about 20 volunteers accompanied us on a trip to Baganara Island Resort. The twenty of us went there this past weekend for a little R & R. We had a great time swimming, playing Frisbee, chess, cards, and volleyball, eating good food, hiking through the jungle, and bridging the gap between the two groups of Peace Corps volunteers: the older ones in my group who’ve been in the field for over fifteen months now (540 days since Miami, but who’s counting?) and the newer group who arrived in July of this year. I feel like we got to know them well, and that we’re closer to them than the previous group was to us. We’ve already set up some joint projects, and I know we’ll be keeping in touch with a lot of them long after we’ve left Guyana.

I’m glad Thanksgiving at the Ambassador’s home was fun. I remember celebrating the Fourth of July there. It was great to eat hamburgers and hotdogs off the grill, to swim in a real pool with blue water (as opposed to swimming in a creek with black water), and to have all of the free soda and beer you can drink.