Date: Fri 17-Nov-1995
Date: Fri 17-Nov-1995
Publication: Bee
Author: KAAREN
Quick Words:
weather-storm-power-outages
Full Text:
w/photos: Storm Batters Newtown; Half The Town Loses Power
B Y K AAREN V ALENTA
Utility crews from as far away as Ohio and Quebec worked in Newtown this week
to restore electricity to customers who lost power in last Saturday night's
storm.
Nearly half of Newtown found itself in the dark when winds gusting up to 65
miles per hour roared through the state, knocking down trees and power lines
and leaving 180,000 homes and businesses in Connecticut without power on
Sunday.
At 8:30 pm Sunday, at the peak of the power outage, 4,530 of Newtown's 9,888
homes, businesses and industries were affected. Margo Jackson-Douglas, a
spokesperson for Connecticut Light & Power, said crews from American Electric
in Ohio, Jersey Central Power & Light in New Jersey, and Hydro Quebec in
Canada were in the Newtown area for several days assisting with the
restoration of power.
Newtown Public Works Director Fred Hurley said employees were called in
Saturday night and Sunday to clear roads which were blocked by parts of fallen
trees including Apple Blossom, Old Hawleyville, Walnut Tree Hill, Glen Road,
Hundred Acres, Bennett's Bridge, Split Rock, Hanover, Ox Hill, Farm Field
Road, Huntingtown, Taunton Hill, Currituck as well as other streets which had
minor blockages from fallen limbs.
By Tuesday afternoon electricity had been restored, at least temporarily, to
all but six customers. Three of these were on Echo Valley Road and included
the Schmidle, Edison and Deluca households.
"A crew came out and fixed the problem at 6 pm on Tuesday but as soon as they
left, the power went out for the whole street," Mae Schmidle said. "They came
back but didn't get it restored again until 10 pm."
The Echo Valley Road families endured more than three days without heat,
lights and running water.
"We lost power for about the same length of time during Hurricane Gloria in
1985, but this was worse because the temperature was much colder," Mrs
Schmidle said. "It gave my husband and me a good taste of what it must have
been like when John Glover built this house in 1710 and lived in it for two
years."
Margo Jackson-Douglas said that the same time the problem occurred on Echo
Valley Road, a total of about 495 customers lost power in Newtown because of a
transformer fire at Academy Lane and Route 25. Everyone was back in service by
11:30 pm Tuesday, she said.
Mr Hurley said the Newtown road crews worked in conjunction with the CL&P
crews, clearing the roads as soon as the utility wires were removed from the
fallen trees.
"We really didn't finish until today," he said on Wednesday. "I think Hundred
Acres was the last road to be opened sometime on Tuesday."
The storm also dumped up to three inches of rain in the Danbury area, causing
drainage problems. A water main broke on West Street in Newtown Saturday
night, closing that road until early Monday.
State officials have estimated that repairing the damage from the storm across
Connecticut will cost at least several million dollars, including a utility
cleanup bill of between $1.5 million and $3 million. The out-of-state line
crews arrived late Sunday and early Monday to relieve the 500 workers on
Northeast Utilities System crews.
The storm hit Newtown Saturday afternoon, causing the first reported power
outage at 4:27 pm. The pace of outages picked up after 8 pm and continued
through the night and through Sunday even though the storm had stopped by
Sunday morning.
"The number of outages peaked Sunday evening because of what we call
`residue,'" Margo Jackson-Douglas explained. "That means there are continued
outages caused by branches that were weakened by the storm and fell on limbs
because of gusts of wind later, or that lines had to be de-energized for
safety reasons while the repair crews were working in an area."
Mr Hurley said the storm caused some settling on Meadow, Elizabeth and other
streets which had been excavated for lateral sewer lines. "When our crews were
caught up with the cleanup operations and were waiting for the CL&P crews to
finish working on the power lines, they used that time to fill the settled
areas with gravel," he said.
School officials opened the Newtown Middle School on Sunday as a shelter for
anyone who had lost power but no one used the facility, they said.
