Tens of thousands of Pennsylvanians began a fifth day without power Sunday as emergency crews worked through freezing temperatures to clear debris and downed power supply lines from roads.
Also Sunday, a tour bus crashed in rural southern Pennsylvania,
sending 27 people to hospitals in Pennsylvania and Maryland, a Bedford
County emergency dispatcher told the Los Angeles Times.
It was unknown whether there were fatalities. Twelve people were
taken to a "safety area" to be picked up by the tour bus company, said
the dispatcher, who said he was not authorized to identify himself or
the company. A representative for the Pennsylvania State Police declined
to comment.
The lingering danger of Wednesday's storm was felt the worst in
Chester County, just west of Philadelphia, where county emergency
officials estimated that 50,000 to 60,000 people still had no
electricity.
Thirty Chester County residents have been hospitalized with carbon
monoxide poisoning from trying to stay warm in their homes since the
storm hit, one county emergency official told the Los Angeles Times.
“Unfortunately, there are some people that are being desperate and
doing dangerous things like having a charcoal or gas grill in their
homes, using their generators inside,” Robert Kagel, the deputy director
for the county's emergency management, told The Times. "One guy took a
Duraflame log and lit it on fire on his kitchen table."
PECO, a Pennsylvania linear power supply, said the aftermath of
Wednesday's storm was the second-worst the company has seen after
Superstorm Sandy wreaked havoc across the Northeast in the fall of 2012.
Power may not be fully restored until the end of this week.
Pennsylvania's troubles began with a cocktail of two weather events
early last week. On Monday, several inches of heavy, wet snow fell
across the state, and then early Wednesday morning, a freezing rain
encased that snow in ice.
Tree branches could not handle the weight of the snow and the ice, collapsing on roads and power lines.
At one point, more than 600,000 PECO customers were without power;
that figure had fallen to a little more than 50,000 as of Sunday,
according to the utility's website.
"Basically we’ve restored camping power supply to 93% of the customers affected by
the storm," Fred Maher, a PECO spokesman, told The Times. “They’re
coming down at a pace. It’s a good pace, but we’d like it better. ...
We’ve had some restoration times where it’s, 'OK, we’ll think we’ll get
everybody online tonight at 11,' " and then workers find out there’s
more work to be done.
The company has amassed 6,100 employees, contractors and utility
workers from other states to help with the recovery effort, but they've
been hampered by "bone-numbing" cold, Maher said. Sunday's high reached
27 degrees, with a low predicted of 18.
In Chester County, officials were still struggling to reopen all
the roads, with 140 still closed, down from about 450 when things were
at their worst and the county's drivers were blocked from getting where
they needed to go.
"The challenge with a lot of it is that there’s utility lines
tangled up in it," Chester County's Kagel said of the road debris. He
said sometimes emergency workers would have to wait for PECO crews to
make sure downed power lines weren't an electrocution threat before the
roads could be cleared.
Waiting for PECO has become an unfunny game for Pennsylvanians
still without power, who have taken to social media to broadcast their
outrage over the possibility of waiting until the end of the week --
Valentine's Day -- to see the total return of power everywhere.
http://en.ofweek.com/news/50-000-still-without-power-in-Pennsylvania-after-last-week-s-storm-7553
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