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WPCNR WEATHER SCOOP. By John F. Bailey. July 19, 2006: As of midnight, the number of customers without power in White Plains had risen to slightly over 7,000 customers, since 5,000 were reported as of 6 P.M., according to Joy Faber, Con Edison spokesperson. Ms. Faber said the number has grown, because Con Ed crews are still assessing damage in the White Plains neighborhoods. She said, “we are working night and day” to repair the damage.

Raising the Roof: Archbishop Stepinac High School on Mamaroneck Avenue shown at 1 P.M. Wednesday had its roof peeled off on the South end of the school. School yard was strewn with debris, felled trees. Photo by Peter Katz for WPCNR News.
The Gedneys, the Highlands, the Saxon Woods, and Havilands Manor were in agony tonight as lights come back slowly, and homeowners see their lifetime investments savaged.

Stepinac Roof Peeled Back by the Mystery Storm. Photo, Peter Katz, for WPCNR News.

Tree toppled Street Light, felling wires, after temporary fix on Mamaroneck Avenue. Photo by Peter Katz for WPCNR News.
Weary, sobered residents were seen on the streets of Murchison Place, Dupont Avenue, Seymour Place, the Gedney Esplanade, Heatherbloom just some of the quiet, devastated streets of Gedney Farms tonight at twilight.
A Sobering Drive.
A WPCNR drive-by on the branch-strewn streets of the Gedneys in the aftermath of downed wires, twisted jagged stricken trees was greeted with astounding sights of massive thick trunked oaks of years-standing at what seemed every other house uprooted and crashed into the stately homes that just 24 hours before had been million dollar homes in White Plains. Now, many await the arborist, and an army of carpenters and insurance adjusters to saw up the huge trunks, cart the debris away and repair the damage.

Tree After Tree Felled in Seconds on Partridge & Ridgeway shown at Twilight Wednesday night. Photo by WPCNR News.
The same devastation on a capricious, vicious random swath can be seen in the Highlands along Soundview Avenue, Hartsdale Avenue and Midchester Avenue, and deeper still into Saxon Woods and Prospect Park.

Ridgeway Tree Ripped From Roots and Hurled onto posh villa. Photo by Peter Katz for WPCNR News.
As WPCNR observed residents walking in the twilight tonight, I did not have the heart to take some of the pictures I saw. However, I must caution, having driven over a live wire on Dupont, which produced a flash and a smell of ozone, the area still appears dangerous, and residents should be aware that live wires may lurk since many are wrapped around trees. It is not a place to be sight-seeing or walking.

Education House at Twilight Wednesday evening. Ed House was closed Wednesday, inaccessible from North Street. Photo by WPCNR News
In the south end of North Street, that North South artery was finally passable as of 8 P.M. this evening, and revealed piles of brush and trunks of trees perched on stone walls after they had been uprooted and flung there.

Saxon Woods Road blocked by tree in a tangle of wires Wednesday afternoon. Photo by Peter Katz for WPCNR News
What in the World Was That?
Residents still have to wonder what happened to White Plains last night between 10 P.M. and midnight. No tornado warnings were issued, though a severe thunderstorm watch was in effect. So what was it. According to a Westchester County press release, the weather bureau is examining the possibility of a microburst. A microburst is defined, according to Wikipedia, as “a very localized column of sinking air, producing damaging divergent and straight-line winds at the surface that are similar to but distinguishable from tornadoes which generally have convergent damage.
The term was defined by severe weather expert Tetsuya Theodore Fujita as affecting an area 4 km (2.5 mi) in diameter or less, distinguishing them as a type of downbursts and apart from common wind shear which can encompass greater areas. Dr. Fujita also coined the term macroburst for downbursts larger than 4 km (2.5 mi).
Microbursts are recognized as capable of generating wind speeds higher than 75 m/s (168 mph; 270 km/h).
It should be noted that White Plains is about 3 miles in diameter. Was it a microburst? Or was it an “unpredicted,” “unwarned,” “surprise tornado?” Why no warning? The Weather Service has a lot to answer. I was watching YES at the time, and there were no “crawls” warning of anything nasty on the way. Perhaps some other channels did show warnings.
The Mayor’s Office of White Plains reported this afternoon the National Weather Service, NOAA is going to view aerials to determine what the weather phenomona was.
The Storm Track
Earlier in the evening Wednesday night, a thunderstorm of lesser winds and heavy rain and hail struck the city, then moved on. “The Mystery Storm” then moved in about 10 P.M. preceded by ominous symphonies of thunder approximately 10 P.M. You knew something was coming, and then you saw it coming with rapidly modulating and flashing lightning and claps of cloud to ground lightening that lasted for WPCNR estimates about one hour and a half. A car enroute from the City Center back into the southend reported having North Street strewn with trees, debris, and entire trees across Havilands Lane and Ridgeway.

Many of White Plains Streets Looked like this Wednesday afternoon. a Havilands Manor street at twilight Wednesday evening. Photo by WPCNR News.
The northern part of White Plains appears untouched. There is no damage North of I-287 that WPCNR observed, and little damage past the Hutchinson River Parkway to the south. The storm appeared to cut a Northwest to Southwest line through the Highlands across Mamaroneck Avenue, sweeping down trees from Saxon Woods North to Bryant Avenue and wreaking its havoc on Prospect Park, Soundview, Saxon Woods, the Highlands, Gedney Farms, Gedney Meadows and Rosedale and North Street and Havilands Manor.

There Are too Many Scenes like this in the White Plains Southend to Put an Accurate Count. Note sheared tree upper right, perhaps a lightning strike. Photo WPCNR News
Officials Congratulate Con Ed.
Public officials put very little specific information on this storm all day today. The Westchester County Executive Andy Spano’s Department of Communications put out a news release congratulating Con Edison on how well they have handled two harsh storms in one week. Well, Con Ed has not handled the information process well.
The number of White Plains customers without power was not announced to WPCNR (despite repeated requests), until 4:30 P.M. The City of White Plains had no idea how many people were out of power.
Had the City of White Plains known over 5,000 customers (now 7,000 at midnight Thursday morning) were without power, they might have been able to set up shelters for ice, food, and possible places to sleep for the elderly and the very young, but they did not apparently have (at least for media consumption), knowledge of the scope of the disaster. As late as 4 P.M., the City of White Plains said they did not know how many customers in White Plains were out. More to the point, the County did not set up any shelter in White Plains either, (as they often do during snowstorms or other disasters).
“Cooling Centers” only Available During Day.
WPCNR was told by a Department of Communcations spokesperson that the City of White Plains had been setting up a shelter. This was news to the Mayor’s Office. Melissa Lopez of the Mayor’s Office said as of 4:30 P.M. they had no plans to open any centers at that time. When informed of this, the Department of Communications spokesperson told WPCNR, persons could go to County “Cooling Centers,” which she said were listed on the county website. She sent WPCNR the listing.
However when WPCNR contacted the White Plains Senior Center on Mitchell Place, one of the White Plains “Cooling Centers,” there was no answer. I also contacted the Fairview Greenburgh Community Center on 32 Manhattan Avenue in White Plains, and the person answer the phone there said it was news to them that they were a designated “Cooling Center.” WPCNR pointed out the Department of Communications, the apparent lack of knowledge of “Cooling Centers” on their list that they were “Cooling Centers.” Victoria Hochman, a spokesperson for the Department of Health contacted WPCNR to explain those cooling centers were simply available “during the day.”
Traffic Reports not issued until after midday.
White Plains Police did a terrible job of communicating routes that were closed and open in the City of White Plains during Thursday morning and afternoon. It was only through the efforts of David Maloney of The Mayor’s Office extracting information from the police department and the Department of Public Works that road conditions were made know by early afternoon. As of 10 A.M. the DPW was reporting all roads were open in White Plains, but this simply was not true. There was no number a citizen could call to get solid up to the minute traffic information, a condition that has existed for years at the Department of Public Safety that they have refused to address. This is not good and it is not professional.
The Mayor’s Office should be congratulated for making a great effort to spell out road conditions despite police ineptitude to do so. The police were out taking care of business, but they would have less business to take care of if people knew what roads were open and which were not. It takes only one officer to coordinate that, and it is high time the Department of Public Safety realized that. July 18 and 19 proved that.
As a result of the lack of information some 8 hours after the event (at 8 A.M. Wednesday), motorists cruised through various blind streets through the southend of town like rats in a maze without apparently coherent direction by the police as to where to go to get out.
WPCNR has pointed out the police department inability to communicate with its citizens during a disaster in the past, and Thursday’s traffic jams on North Street, Ridgeway and other major arteries show the communication at 422-6111 have not changed.