PDA

View Full Version : Millions Face 2nd Hot Night in Blackout



prmama
08-15-03, 07:17 PM
Bloomberg says the blackout shows that in the modern world we seldom stand alone.
Bouncing back from the largest blackout in U.S. history, cities from the Midwest to Manhattan restored power Friday to millions of people - only to confront a second series of woes created in the aftermath of the enormous outage.
Electricity flowed in Cleveland on day two of the blackout, but water moved at a trickle. Times Square was once again the luminous center of Manhattan, but none of the subways were yet running. The lights clicked on in more than 1 million homes in Michigan, but gas remained in scarce supply around Detroit.
Some customers in the Cleveland area, upstate New York and New York City received the unkindest cut of all: Their power was restored and then turned off due to rolling blackouts needed to conserve electricity.
Officials in Michigan warned that the whir of air conditioners and the glow of televisions might not return until the end of the weekend as the cause of the massive outage remained a mystery.
The blackout washed across a huge slice of North America, knocking out service in parts of eight states and Canada in just nine seconds.
LATEST NEWS
Blackout Problems Linger for Travelers
Blackout Paralyzes Auto Industry

Millions Face 2nd Hot Night in Blackout
Areas Affected by the Northeast Blackout
Outage Cripples Some Electronic Gadgets
Blackout Postpones U.S.-Puerto Rico Game
President Bush, during a tour of a California national park, said part of the problem was "an antiquated system" to distribute electricity nationally.
"It's a wake-up call," Bush said. "The grid needs to be modernized, the delivery systems need to be modernized."
In New York City, Mayor Michael Bloomberg said he received a call from Bush offering congratulations on the city's handling of the crisis. Crime in the city was actually down overnight compared to an average evening, he said.
"I think all New Yorkers have done their part," Bloomberg said. "If we compare this time to what happened in 1977, when there was chaos and crime, this time we saw compassion."
But compassion doesn't make the trains run. The subway system remained paralyzed, while the two major commuter rail lines limped through Friday with sporadic service. The city's subways, which carry 5 million daily riders, won't return until at least Saturday, Bloomberg said.
With about 15 percent of the city's homes still without power, some New Yorkers have already endured an outage longer than the 25-hour blackout of 1977.
While most New Yorkers and virtually all the 1.4 million Ohioans who lost power were back on line, Detroit faced a second hot summer night without air conditioning. Close to 1 million people were still without power in the Motor City.
The failure of electric pumps led to a run on gasoline, with Detroit residents lining up to fill 'er up. Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm signed an executive order to expedite nearly 1 million gallons of gasoline from western Michigan to the Detroit area.
Cleveland struggled mightily to provide residents with water for simple tasks like brushing teeth, but taps barely flowed. By Friday afternoon, though, power was restored and there was hope that the water would soon follow.
The restoration of power was merely a tease for an unlucky swath of New York state and city, where the electricity crackled and then quickly ceased. Upstate utilities - shortly after restoring power - were ordered to initiate rolling blackouts as a conservation measure, with as many as 50,000 customers affected.
"This is the crisis of a career for me," said Julius Ciaccia, Cleveland water commissioner, a 27-year employee. Cleveland officials, fearful of sewage flowing into Lake Erie because of the outage, closed the city's beaches.
In Connecticut, residents heard an emergency plea from the governor to cut back on power use after a state transmission line that feeds the southwest part of the state failed early Friday.
The call for conservation echoed across each state affected by the blackout. "Every light bulb matters today," said Long Island Power Authority Chairman Richard Kessel. "If you don't turn them off, they will go off."
Despite plunging several of the nation's largest cities into darkness, the outage resulted in few reports of vandalism or increased violence. But there was at least one U.S. fatality: A 40-year-old New York man suffered a heart attack during an overnight fire.
In Canada's capital of Ottawa, police reported 23 cases of looting, along with two deaths possibly linked to the blackout - a pedestrian hit by a car and a fire victim. There were also reports of minor looting in Brooklyn and Detroit.
Officials in Michigan also blamed the power failure for a small explosion at a refinery about 10 miles south of Detroit. No injuries were reported, but hundreds of residents within a mile of the refinery were evacuated.
As for the cause of the outage, which happened almost instantaneously around the Northeast at 4:11 p.m. EDT Thursday, officials remained in the dark.
Investigators focused on a massive electrical grid that encircles Lake Erie, moving power from New York to the Detroit area, Canada and back to New York state. There had been problems with the transmission loop in the past, officials said.
The exact source and cause of the blackout led to bickering over the blame. Initial reports cited a lightning strike near Niagara Falls, followed by fingerpointing at Ohio, where officials pointed back at Canada and upstate New York. On Friday, one expert speculated the problem began in Michigan.
New York Gov. George Pataki also demanded an investigation into what he called failures to improve the regional power system and prevent blackouts like those of 1965 and 1977.
"We have to know why this happened, how it happened," he said.
Cleveland workers were advised to stay home until noon on a day when temperatures climbed into the mid-80s. A few ignored the advice, strolling through near-empty streets.
"I have no water and no lights so I might as well come to work," said attorney Lori Zocolo, arriving at her downtown office at 5:30 a.m. in a T-shirt and shorts. Her biggest complaint: No water meant she couldn't brush her teeth.
Power was switched on Friday at the four pumps that provide water to Cleveland and its suburbs. Still, bottled water became a precious commodity in Ohio, and two dozen National Guard tankers began distributing emergency drinking water.
In Detroit, low water pressure had officials warning residents to boil water before drinking or cooking with it.
Flights resumed Friday morning at Cleveland Hopkins International Airport as the airline business slowly returned. But despite the airlines' efforts, hundreds of flights were canceled nationwide.
At the New York area airports - Kennedy International, LaGuardia and Newark Liberty - planes were arriving and departing, but with unspecified delays. About 3,000 people were stranded overnight at Kennedy.
"They're trying to catch up," FAA spokeswoman Laura Brown said of the airlines.

prmama
08-15-03, 07:21 PM
As of 1800 hrs, we have the power back on here in the city. At least where I live at. It was long and hot day outside in the 90's and some of NYC was still without power as of this morning. SO far everything was restore and working on low power.
Semper Fi
Heather

Osotogary
08-15-03, 10:50 PM
prmama,
Do you think that there is going to be another "baby boom "coming soon?
Gary

prmama
08-16-03, 05:12 AM
I don't know. With the new technology we got it running in less then 36 hrs in NYC. I don't remember the one in 1977. I was six yrs old. Back in 1977 it took 2 days to get the power restore to normal. Hopefully we don't get a another nite like this in a long time.
I thank god it was not a terrors act too. We still trying to found out were the power went out. Some say it was up in the Niergo Falls area and some say it started on Ohio and here in the City. So who knows.
Lucky I didn't have to work on Thrusday cause I would have been stuck on the trains or worst 100 miles away from home and had to walk it. And trust me I would never have made it with the heat wave that we have here.
Boy was it dark Thrusday nite. We seen the stars out for the first time in yrs.
Who else was effort of from this? I hope power is restore where you lived at.

Semper Fi
God Bless ya
Heather

prmama
08-16-03, 06:25 AM
Bloomberg says attitudes have changed in New York City since the 1977 blackout.
NEW YORK (AP) -- Subways, elevators and refrigerators were running in all of New York City on Saturday as the city began its first full day with electricity since Thursday's massive power outage.
Consolidated Edison said power was fully restored to all of its 3.1 million customers at 9:03 p.m. Friday, nearly 29 hours after the blackout paralyzed the city.
"We are 100 percent back," Con Ed spokeswoman D. Joy Faber said.
The nation's largest public transportation system began moving after midnight, and by dawn trains on all lines were in service with minor disruptions.
Crews had been able to inspect rails and move several hundred stranded trains as power was gradually restored thoughout the day on Friday, New York City Transit said.

Breakdown of Blackout Effect
"By the time we had power, we were pretty much ready to go," said Marisa Baldeo, a spokeswoman for the agency.
The Long Island Rail Road and Metro-North commuter rails, which had only run sporadically on Friday, said they would be running on regular weekend schedules on Saturday.
The blackout occurred at 4:11 p.m. Thursday; on Friday, thousands of people were still trying to get home, businesses were closed and workers were taking an enforced three-day weekend.
Con Ed spokesman Chris Olert said the utility was confident that power would remain fully restored.
Parts of Staten Island experienced rolling blackouts on Friday, but Olert said the company hoped reduced demand over the weekend would help prevent further problems.
Hundreds of flights at the region's three major airports were delayed or canceled because of the blackout, but full electrical power was restored by Friday evening to LaGuardia Airport and Newark Liberty International Airport and to all passenger terminals at John F. Kennedy International Airport.
The City Council finance office estimated the blackout cost the city up to $750 million in lost revenue, up to $40 million in lost tax revenue and up to $10 million in overtime pay for the first 24 hours after electricity went out.
On Friday, rumpled and unshaven commuters stranded in Manhattan overnight streamed on foot toward Grand Central Terminal and Pennsylvania Station.
"There were people sleeping in their chairs at the trading desks, others on sofas in the conference rooms," said Ted Sullivan, as he headed down Madison Avenue, hoping to catch a train home to Princeton Junction, N.J.
Workers who did make it home Thursday night were left at morning rush hour to squeeze onto buses, hail the rare cab, sweat it out on foot or take the day off.
Sanitation Commissioner John Doherty said crews would work overtime through the weekend, collecting trash - much of it piled up on steamy sidewalks as New Yorkers cleaned spoiled food from warm refrigerators.
Officials opened several cooling centers for people perspiring in the sticky heat, and the parks department hooked up 600 sprinklers in parks throughout the city.
Thursday's dark night saw about 60 serious fires, incluing one in Brooklyn that killed a 6-year-old boy. Bloomberg said the majority of fires were sparked by lighted candles. One person died of a heart attack, a firefighter was injured and a police officer became ill.
The city received 80,000 calls to its 911 line - more than double the usual - and emergency medical personnel responded to 5,000 calls. Hundreds were rescued from elevators after the city lost power.
Public pools in many areas were open on Friday, but officials closed city beaches because of the health threat posed by sewage leaked into waters during the power crunch.
Sightseers were left to enjoy the parks or roam the streets as many tourist attractions were closed on Friday, including the Empire State Building, Statue of Liberty and Metropolitan Museum of Art, which usually draws 50,000 visitors on a weekend.
Some exasperated tourists simply made plans to bolt.
The airports were open, but travelers endured long lines - not just at ticket counters, but at pay phones and everything else. Many faced travel delays of several hours.
Across town at the Port Authority bus terminal, would-be passengers stranded for nearly 24 hours begged to board buses that idled outside. Some buses were operating, but the building and its ticket windows were closed, leaving drivers to sort out the chaos.
Dominik Scales, an Australian on his way to Arizona, was not impressed with his first trip to Manhattan.
"Everyone's walking around with these 'I Love New York' T-shirts," he grumbled. "I hate New York. I just want to get out of here."