Board of Legislators: Con Ed must improve response time

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WPCNR THE POWER STORY. From the Westchester County Board of Legislators. 10 AM,  March 5, 2018:

“We know utilities have faced a daunting task in responding to the increasing number of severe weather emergencies, but Con Ed and NYSEG should be in a much better position to deal with these situations proactively,” said  White Plains resident, Ben Boykin, Chair of the Westchester County Board of Legislators. “Con Ed and NYSEG must be ready to reach out immediately to communities and residents, to provide ongoing communications regarding staffing and remediation efforts and to have crews available to begin work rapidly.”

The scope of damage from Friday’s storm is extensive with flooding, fallen trees, downed power lines and property damage across the County, from North to South, from East to West.

The Board of Legislators would like to express its gratitude to first responders and crews from various municipalities and departments who worked throughout the weekend responding to emergencies, opening roads and clearing hazards.

However, as a new work week dawns, thousands of county residents are still without power, many roads remain closed and a new storm could affect the area this Wednesday.

The Chair and the Legislators spent the weekend in conversation with federal, state, county, and local officials and with Con Ed, to help flag the numerous critical facilities, intersections and residences that require attention.

“Con Ed says it will have a complement of around 300 crews fully engaged in the restoration process as the week begins,” Chairman Boykin said. “The Board also will be looking into ways that we can work with utilities to ensure that they’re better prepared for storms in the future, including working with utilities and federal, state, county and local officials to explore ways to speed up the process of calling in help from across the country.”

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41,654 Westchesterites Out of Power as of 1:30 A.M. Monday morning. County Executive George Latimer blames Con failure to turn off power for towns and cities request, prolonging restoration pace.

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County Executive George Latimer Briefing the Media on the recovery efforts to restore power

WPCNR THE POWER STORY. By John F. Bailey.March 5, 2018:

County Executive George Latimer in a news conference late Sunday afternoon said Con Edison was not prepared to handle the storm that blasted Westchester with  45 mile per hour to 73 MPH wind gusts (at Westchester Airport) uprooted hundreds of trees, cutting off power to 72,000 Westchester Customers by Saturday morning.

Con Edison, after crews cleared debris was making up the number of restorations at the rate of about a 1,000 an hour. Since the 4 PM news conference ended at 5 PM yesterday, 12,000 customers (a customer represents one meter), had been restored bring the number in the county without power to  41,654 at 1:30 AM Monday morning.

Latimer praised the county towns and cities public works crews whom he said were ready to clear debris and fallen trees in areas that had lost power, but the mayors of all the towns told him that Con Edison delayed in shutting power to areas where debris had blocked roads, delaying the rollout of Con Ed’s own recovery efforts.

Asked by WPCNR how many cities and towns had reported significant Con Ed delay in shutting down power to the afflicted areas of their towns, Latimer said

“All of them, all 45.”

Asked what was the average time of delay the towns experienced, Latimer said he did not have an average. Asked if after the roads were cleared, was Con Ed speedy in rushing restoration crews, he and the entourage in chorus, said they were.

Asked as of 4:30 PM what percentage of  the Westchester towns and cities had cleared fallen debris and trees making them Con Ed-ready, a Westchester public safety official said the county did not have a percentage of how many ready-to-restore cities and towns were waiting for Con Ed as of 5 PM Sunday.

Latimer said he and his staff had inspected the damage in Yorktown, Bedford and areas in the north end of the county and said the damage was “devastating.” He began the news conference at the Hudson Valley Transportation Center Sunday  afternoon, announcing  54,000 Con Edison Customers were still without power, and 22,000 customers of New York State Electric and Gas were unconnected.

He said the chief of NYSEG apologized to Mr. Latimer for NYSEG being “unresponsive” to county officials Friday evening and communications had improved.( Latimer had sent out a news release castigating the NYSEG lack of communication. )

Latimer said Con Edison has promised full restoration by Tuesday about noon.  NYSEG is promising full restoration sometime today Monday.

Progress in restoring power to Westchester residents who are growing increasingly angry, Latimer said, at 48 hours or more wihout power, has progressed since the 5 PM Sunday hour. A total of 12, 363 have been restored since then according to the Con Edison Storm Center map, leaving 41,654 still in the dark and the cold.

The County Executive said traffic lights at crossroads were still out in a number of communities at 5 PM and motorists should come to full stops before entering the intersections.

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An intersection a half mile from the Transportation Center where the news conference was being conducted had just a stop sign (seen slightly to the left of center  in the middle of the intersection as traffic lights were dark. No blinking caution light. No police presence.  This was the busy speedway of Route 100 at the Hospital Road overpass.

The head of the Public Service Commission said snow in the midwest meant that work crews from Ohio, Illinois Michigan could not be counted on to supplement Con Ed and NYSEG crews.”We are on our own,” he said. He also promised the press the Public Service Commission would be taking a hard look at how the utilities handled this storm damage. A representive from the Governor’s office said 200 National Guardsmen were being sent to Westchester to deploy as the county sees fit.

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The media awaits the County Executive, shown in maroon sweater, right background

Here is how the Con Ed Storm Center Map shows the outages at 1:30 A.M. Monday morning:

WHITE PLAINS– 24 OUTAGES, 363 Customers without power

Pelham: 71 Outages, 545 Customers No Power

Mamaroneck: 74 Outages; 919 Customers Powerless

Larchmont: 530 Outages; 2,050 Customers No power

Harrison: 74 Outages, 930 Customers Out

Elmsford: 37 Outages, 1,039 Customers No Power

Quakeridge area: 55 Outages, 1,448 Customers Out

Bronxville: 62 Outages, 637 Customers Powerless

Sleepy Hollow: 20 Outages, 368 Customers Out

Hawthorne: 16 Outages, 375 Out

Thornwood: 18 Outages, 163 Powerless

Dobbs Ferry: 24 Outages, 156 No Power

Yorktown: 45 Outages, 292 Customers Out

Mount Vernon (either side of the Bronx River Parkway): 45 Outages, 1,617 Customers W/O Power

Scarsdale: 30 Outages, 761 Out

Greenville: 33 Outages, 179 Out of Power

Hastings on Hudson: 36 Outages, 415 W/O Power

Valhalla Area: 30 Outages, 1,318 No Power

Peekskill Area: 91 Outages, 1,557 Customers Out

Mohegan Lake: 36 Outages, 1,100 Customer Powerless

Shrub Oak: 31 Outages, 1,091 Customers Unconnected

 Mt Kisco-Bedford area: 73 Outages, 504 Customers Out

Pleasantville: 57 Outages, 585 Customers, No Power

Armonk: 41 Outages, 1,065 Customers Out

Rye City, Rye Brook Area: 58 Outages, 509 Customers Not Connected

Chapaqua Millbrook: 51 Outages, 706 Customers No Power

Ossining: 63 Outages, 1,028 Customers Out

Croton Harmon, Crotonville: 68 Outages, 607 OUT

 

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53,000 Westchester County Residents Continue Suffering without Power or Heat as More Outages Are Reported Hourly.

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WPCNR THE POWER STORY. By John F. Bailey. March 4, 2018 2:30 PM:

Con Edison is promising on their Storm Center website that all power will be restored across Westchester County by noon Tuesday. As of noon with restoration efforts beginning this morning, Con Edison still reports 4, 001 Outages in Westchester County and the 5 boroughs of New York City. They have restored power to 15,003 Customers (meaning one power meter per customer, with the possibility  as several hundred to a meter.) Power is still off for 57,593 customers  in the Westchester and NYC boroughs.

At  2:15 PM, a spokesperson for Con Edison, told WPCNR 53,000 Westchester Customers remain to be restored to power, down from 72,000 yesterday and 62,000 earlier today.

The increase in Customers without power in the Westchester towns listed below may be because of switching operations. She said the customers out of power  in Westchester numbers are going down, not up.

However watching the Outage numbers and the Customers Out Numbers changing on the Con Edison Storm may, it appears the number of outages are outdistancing the restorations at a troubling pace.

The power outages appear  more than they were yesterday. The upper reaches of the county, Peekskill, Ossining, Shrub Oak, Cortland are rife with power outages. The South Shore of the Ryes, the Mamaroneck-Larchmont  area and Mount Vernon have grown in outages, apparently now being reported or discovered.

Mamaroneck Larchmont has the most Customers without power, 5,351; Chapaqua has 2,865 powerless Customers; Thornwood, 2,987;  Mount Vernon east and west of the Bronx River Parkway, 1,808; Peekskill, yesterday’s most devasted power grid is up 1,000 customers without power to 3,069: The Rye, Rye Brook area has 2,906 Customers without power.  Hartsdale 2.906.

In White Plains, as of noon, Sunday, recovery has been partially achieved, there are 85 outages with 118 customers (one meter per customer) out of service. The numbers continue to fluctuate up and down as more outages are discovered and some are restored, it should be noted in the following towns and villages

The outages elsewhere in the County

Hartsdale: 28 Outages, 361 Customers Affected:

Greenville: 31 Outages, 193 Customers Without Power

Eastchester Area: 93 Outages, 1,599 Customers No Power

Mamaroneck/Larchmont Area: 157 Outages, 5,351 Customers Powerless

Hartsdale 74 Outages, 1,690 Customers No power.

Rye/Rye Brook Area: 54 Outages, 2,906 Customers No Power

Port Chester : 18 Outages, 1,163 Customers No Service

Pelham/Pelham Manor: 70 Outages, 765 Customers Power Out

Mount Vernon Area East/West of Bronx River Parkway: 85 Outages 1,808 Customers Affected

Hastings-On-Hudson:  33 Outages, 411 Customers No Service

Dobbs Ferry: 26 Outages, 307 Customers Affected

Elmsford-Fairview Area: 33 Outages, 1,238 Customers No Power

Thornwood: 87 Outages, 2,987 Customers Powerless

Pleasantville:  46 Outages, 538 Customers out

Ossining: 78 Outages, 1,767 Customers No Power

Chapaqua Area: 246 Outages, 2,865 Out

Mt Kisco/Bedford Area: 117 Outages, 1,728 Out

Peekskill/Crompond Area: 160 Outages, 3,069 Customers Affected

Shrub Oak: 81 Outages, 2,607 Customers Out

Mohegan Lake: 19 Outages, 168 Customers Power Out

Cortland: 60 Outages, 2,026 Customers No Power

Armonk: 75 Outages 1,539 Outages, Powerless

 

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County Publishes Locations of Warming Centers as Power Outage Recovery Slowly Begins

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WPCNR THE POWER STORY. From the Westchester County Department of Communications. March 4, 2018:

Date/Time:
3/4/18 – 10:00

Local EOC:

  • New Rochelle
  • Yonkers EOC
  • Yorktown PD
  • North Salem EOC
  • North Salem EOC
  • Scarsdale EOC
  • Somers

States of Emergency:

  • Village of Scarsdale
  • Village of Bronxville
  • Town of Yorktown
  • Town of Somers
  • Town of North Salem
  • Village Pelham

Mass Care: Shelters, Warming Centers, and Charging Centers:

  • Bedford – Warming Center – Town Hall – 231 Bedford Road, Bedford, NY 10507
  • Cortlandt – Shelter/Warming Center – Moribito Community Center – 29 Westbrook Drive, Cortlandt, NY 10567 – 24 hrs
  • Elmsford – Warming Center – Village Hall – 15 South Stone Avenue, Elmsford, NY 10523; 1000-1800 hrs 3/4
  • Elmsford – Mobile Charging Site – White Plains Avenue & Sears Avenue, Elmsford, NY 10523 1000-1800 hrs 3/4.
  • Lewisboro – Warming Center – Lewisboro Library – 15 Main Street, South Salem, NY 10590, 1200-1700 hrs 3/4
  • T/Mamaroneck – Warming Center-  Senior Center – 1288 Boston Post Rd, Larchmont, NY 10538
  • V/Mamroneck– Warming Center-  Senior Center – 1288 Boston Post Rd, Larchmont, NY 10538
  • V/Larchmont – Warming Center-  Senior Center – 1288 Boston Post Rd, Larchmont, NY 10538 Mt. Kisco – Warming Center- Boys and Girls Club –1100-1800 hrs 3/4
  • Mt. Kisco – Warming Center – Mt. Kisco Public Library – 100 Main Street Mt. Kisco, NY 10549; 1100-1500 hrs 3/4
  • Mt. Pleasant – Warming Center – Town Hall Tower Room/Community Center – pending details
  • North Castle –Warming Center-  Hergenhan Center – 40 Maple Avenue Armonk, NY 10504 0900-2100 hrs on 3/4
  • North Salem – Warming Center – North Salem VAC – 14 Daniel Drive (Exit 8 I-684)North Salem, NY 10560
  • North White Plains – Library, warming. -10 Clove Rd in North White Plains – 9:00 pm to 9:00
  • V/Ossining – Community Center – 95 Broadway Ossining, NY 10562; 0900-1800 hrs 3/4
  • T/ and V/ Pelham – Warming Center – Daronco Town House – 20 5thAvenue Pelham, NY 10803,
  • Rye – Warming Center – 281 Midland Avenue, Rye, NY 10580
  • Rye Brook –Warming Center – Community Center – 32 Garibaldi Place Rye Brook, NY 10573
  • Somers – Shelter/Warming Center – Heritage Hills Activity Center – Heritage Hills Drive, Somers, NY 10589
  • Tarrytown – Warming Center/Charging Station – 240 West Main Street Tarrytown, NY 10591 – will reopen 0800 hrs 3/4.

 

 

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Yonkers Rabid Coyote Apprehended, Destroyed by County Police. Companion Coyote Possibly Rabid Sought.

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WPCNR HEALTH BULLETIN. From the Westchester County Department of Health. March 4, 2018:

The Westchester County Department of Health cautions residents to steer clear of coyotes and avoid walking alone in wooded areas, after a coyote captured in Yonkers tested positive for rabies Saturday.

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A coyote displaying aggressive behavior. If you encounter a coyote displaying unprovoked behavior like this. Report it to police, please, and avoid the animal for your own safety.From WPCNR photo archives.

The coyote was shot by a Westchester County public safety officer Thursday evening after it lunged at him on the Dunwoodie Golf Course in Yonkers.

A second coyote was present at the time of the attack but was not captured. Police had been searching on foot and via helicopter for an aggressive coyote following six other coyote attacks in Hastings and Yonkers on Wednesday and Thursday.

“If you see a coyote, don’t approach it,” said Health Commissioner Sherlita Amler, MD.  “If it appears aggressive or lethargic, it could have rabies, so contact local police.”

Although the health department cannot be certain that the same coyote was involved in every incident, based on the timeline and locations of the attacks, it is likely this was the attacking coyote. There have been no reported coyote attacks in the area since this coyote was shot Thursday night. Coyote attacks are relatively rare in Westchester.

Everyone who reported their exposure to a coyote over the past several days has begun receiving preventive rabies treatment. If left untreated, rabies is fatal.

The attacks started Wednesday, when a coyote bit a woman and killed her Yorkie in Hastings. Another man and a woman in Hastings were attacked a short while later. The next morning, a third woman was attacked. Then a mail carrier was bitten as she made her rounds in the Homefield section of Yonkers.  A woman fended off a coyote with her bicycle on the South County Trailway near Tuckahoe Road. Just after 3 p.m., a man was bitten on the trailway, north of Yonkers Avenue in Yonkers.

Unusual behavior may be the first sign of rabies in an animal. A rabid animal may become either abnormally aggressive or unusually tame. It may lose fear of people and become excited and irritable, or appear particularly passive and lethargic. Staggering and frothing at the mouth are sometimes noted.

Any physical contact with a wild or unfamiliar animal should be reported to a health care provider. All animal bites or contacts with animals suspected of having rabies must be reported to the Westchester County Department of Health at (914) 813-5000, 24 hours a day.

Keeping pet rabies vaccinations up to date is also important for protection against rabies. New York State law requires dogs, cats and ferrets to be vaccinated against rabies and receive regular booster shots.  For more information, go to www.westchestergov.com/health or call the RABIES INFOLINE at (914) 813-5010.

 

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Town by Key Town — The No Power Report as of 2 PM SATURDAY

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WPCNR THE POWER REPORT. Created From the Con Edison Storm Center Map by WPCNR. March 3, 2018:

Con Edison has made progress in restoring power around the hard hit central Westchester area. Peekskill is by far the most affected area with over 2,000 customers out of power, New Rochelle, Mount Vernon, Harrison, Rye, Larchmont and Mamaroneck, Elmsford, Valhalla approach 1,000 or over in customers out of power.

Here are the figures for the most hard hit towns as of 2 PM. Restoration will begin bigtime on Sunday according to a Con Edison briefing to officials that ended a short while ago. You can read Greenburgh Town Supervisor Paul Feiner’s synopsis of  the Con Edison briefing to officials  in the story following this listing below.

Note a “customer” represents one meter, so the number of persons affected receiving power off one meter could be substantially more than the “Customer” number.

White Plains: Numbers of outages cut in have by mid-afternoon, as of 2 PM– 26 Outages, 355 customers affected.

Harrison: 68 Outages, 1,874 Customers powerless

Rye: 43 Outages, 1,264 Customers out

Larchmont: 76 Outages, 3,366 Out

Mamaroneck: 29 Outages, 960 Out

Scarsdale: 61 Outages, 706 Customers Out

Elmsford: 35 Outages, 1,024 Customers Without Power

Valhalla:  21 Outages, 920 Powerless

New Rochelle: 45 Outages, 1,796 Without Power

Pelham: 71 Outages, 748 Customers Out

Mount Vernon: 60 Outages,  1,500 Customers Powerless

Bronxville: 59 Outages, 800  Customers No Power

Mt. Pleasant: 25 Outages,  1,417 Powerless

Chappaqua: 28 Outages, 641 Out

Croton-on-Harmon: 43 Outages, 641 Out

Mohegan Lake: 47 Outages, 1,526 Customers Powerless

Peekskill area: 59 Outages, 2,133 Customers without power

“Customer,” as defined by Con Edison is 1 Meter, meaning there may be more than one person represented by one meter.

 

 

 

 

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Paul Feiner, Greenburgh Supervisor Reports on What He Has Learned from his Briefing with Con Edison

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WPCNR THE POWER REPORT. From Paul Feiner, Greeburgh Town Supervisor in a Email received moments ago 2 PM E.S.T. March 3, 2018:

CON ED RESTORATION UPDATE

I spent the past few hours interacting with Con Ed officials and meeting with the town’s Con Ed municipal liaison at Greenburgh Police HQ about the power restoration efforts.

Con Ed’s leadership team organized a conference call this morning with municipal officials from around the county.

We spoke with the Vice President of Electric Operations.

He indicated that there were 81,000 customers out of power around the county, with 16,700 restorations so far.  In Greenburgh this morning there were 4,317 outages. A short time ago the number went down to 3,440.

WHAT CON ED IS DOING—THE PROCESS OF GETTING POWER RESTORED

High winds made restoration difficult yesterday. There are many trees that are down. Broken poles, etc..  Since yesterday’s nor’easter Con Ed has been giving priority to opening up roads, addressing low hanging wires. Con Ed has to clear away downed lines, trees and other debris.  They have to check for any damage to their system and assign crews and equipment to the area to begin repairs. They have to fix the power lines, transformers, or connections that caused  the problem so they can get power back on quickly to critical facilities like hospital, customers who depend on life support equipment, schools, water treatment facilities, fire houses.  If you live near one of these facilities you might be lucky –because when the power goes on at those locations, chances are better that it will also go on for you.  If a tree is blocking access to a road – and people can’t get out of their home – that will also be given priority.

CON ED PRIORITY SYSTEM

Con Ed’s policy is to restore power to the lines and equipment that will bring power back to most people as quickly as possible. They restore all other customers who have lost power after that.

CON ED HAS THEIR OWN PRIORITY SYSTEM—TOWN DOESN’T CONTROL WHO GETS POWER ON FIRST

Con Ed has taken the politics out of the restoration process. They have their own priority system and they follow their own process.

REPAIRS TAKE TIME—I PREDICT THAT SERVICE WILL BE OUT FOR SOME RESIDENTS FOR AT LEAST A FEW DAYS…

Con Ed did not provide us with estimates as to when exactly service in Greenburgh will be restored. Although it took two weeks to restore service to most Greenburgh residents after SANDY, my guess is that most Greenburgh residents out of power will have their power restored by Tuesday. This is based on my experiences dealing with Con Ed.

ONE OF THE PROBLEMS –LACK OF STAFF  ——CON ED CALLING IN MUTUAL ASSISTANCE   CREWS FROM OTHER COMPANIES WILL START SHOWING UP TOMORROW AND MONDAY

During our conference call Con Ed told municipal officials that restoration for most people will start tomorrow.  

A problem: lack of crews. Some crews from around the country are expected to come to Westchester tomorrow (Sunday) and Monday.

MY GUESS—MOST OF GREENBURGH WILL HAVE POWER TUESDAY

Most of Greenburgh will have power on Tuesday. Some today, others tomorrow and Monday.

ALL DOWNED WIRES SHOULD BE CONSIDERED LIVE

All downed wires should be considered live.  Con Ed placed yellow do not cross tapes near wires. But- some of the tapes have been knocked down by the winds. If you see a wire DO NOT GO NEAR IT. It could be dangerous. Con Ed is supposed to hire crews to stand near the downed wires.  If Con Ed crews are not protecting the wires – we have been assigning police to areas.

IF YOU CAN’T TAKE THE COLD THERE ARE TEMPORARY OPTIONS AVAILABLE

If you are FREEZING there are some options available. The town has opened the Theodore Young Community Center as a shelter for those without power. It’s free and staffed by the CERT team. We have cots, showers, etc…  If you don’t want to sleep at a community center (two people took advantage of the shelter at the Theodore Young Community Center last night), I would be happy to call residents and ask if they would make a room available to someone out of power.  Or, you could contact friends, relatives elsewhere who have power.  My e mail is pfeiner@greenburghny.com.

 

I PROMISE TO TRY HARD TO PRESS CON ED TO GIVE OUR TOWN THE HIGHEST PRIORITY POSSIBLE—GETTING POWER RESTORED

Last night, I was freezing like many of you. I know how stressed out and uncomfortable those without power are. I promise to work as hard as possible to get your power restored quickly. I’m not happy with the delays in restoring power and am doing everything I can to expedite the power restoration so you can live comfortably and happily in Greenburgh.  But, there is not much more that can be done if Con Ed doesn’t have the resources to restore everyone’s power quickly.

IF THERE ARE LIFE THREATENING MEDICAL ISSUES- PLEASE ADVISE

Con Ed has a registry of people who are on life support and have medical emergencies. Please let Con Ed know if you, someone you know depends on life support equipment or has a medical emergency. They keep records of these customers and contact them when there are emergencies.  If you need help – and are not getting the help please e mail me at pfeiner@greenburghny.com.

 

SORRY FOR THE INCONVENIENCES. I PROMISE TO GET BACK TO EVERYONE WHO HAS A CONCERN.

Paul Feiner

My cell phone is 914 438 134

 

 

 

 

 

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High Number of Downed Trees, Persistent High Winds Slow Con Edison Power Restoration Efforts. No change in Outages Overnight. High Winds Put Bucket Extension Personnel at Risk. No estimate for Westchester Restoration as of 10:30 SAT Morning Con Edison Reports.Queens and Brooklyn Also Hard Hit.

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WPCNR THE POWER STORY. By John F. Bailey. March 3, 2018. 10:40 AM E.S.T. :

As of 10:30 A.M. Con Edison reports 72,596 Con Edison customers (a customer is one electric meter, as defined by Con Ed), 2.2% of the  3,323,537 customers in the five boroughs of New York City and Westchester County are without power.

In White Plains, as of this hour, there are 83 Outages reported, affecting 1,408 customers.

Westchester Con Edison spokesman Sydney Alvarez told WPCNR, is by far the hardest hit due to a high total of downed trees, that have affected the county above ground power lines.

The wind conditions are expected to be factors in the progress of repairs. Currently as of 11 A.M., Westchester County Airport reports wind speed is 25 knots with gusts to 40 miles an hour.

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In White Plains, for example, a large elm tree has fallen across Bryant Avenue in the vicinity of Bryant Gardens apartments.

The trees, Alvarez said which have to be cleared by local municipalities before Con Edison trucks go in. The weather has cleared but stiff winds still persist.

Alvarez said there is a threshold of wind velocity at which the Con Edison buckets are at risk to be blown over or make repairs by technicians in the buckets aloft unsafe or  and repairs difficult to execute safely. Alvarez said the repair crew foreman makes the decision as to whether the winds are too high for the bucket apparatus to be deployed.

The spokesman told WPCNR Con Ed had been preparing for the springtime hurricane (winds roared through through Westchester County out of the northeast at over40 miles per hour most of yesterday afternoon and through the evening with wind gusts as high as 60 and 70 miles an hour, Alvarez said.

Alvarez said Con Edison is working closely with municipalities for tree clearance. He said repairs would proceed with safety the first priority after community roads had been cleared. Con Ed will proceed attempting to restore the outages affecting the highest number of customers first.

At this point, he said because of the high wind conditions, Con Edison could not promise when restorations to the affected Westchester areas would be complete.

Alvarez said residents who are without power should be sure and turn off all appliances to avoid a power surge damage when power is restored.

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MAYOR ANNOUNCES OPENING OF WARMING CENTER 303 QUARROPAS STREET for Those Without Power in White Plains–1,084 without power as of 5:45 PM

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WPCNR PUBLIC SAFETY NOTICE. From the Mayor’s Office, with WPCNR Supplements. Friday 5:40 P.M. UPDATED 6:25 PM:

Mayor Tom Roach of White Plains in a recorded message is calling White Plains residents via the city’s emergency notification line to warn residents that there are power outages in the city and that a warming center at 303 Quarropas Street in White Plains is available for families and residents affected by power loss.

His recorded message says there are a number of residents who have lost power in the city do to the 50 mile per winds in the storm that has been affecting the city the last 15 hours.

A check of the Coned outage map shows 59 outages in White Plains affecting 1,084 customers. Across Westchester communities Con Ed reports 3,059 Outages affecting 61,059  customers  in the 6 PM hour without power.

Communities hardest hit by the storm showing and reporting 50 outages affecting an average of over 1,000 customers each in each town are Armonk, Bronxville, Mt.Vernon, New Rochelle, Harrison, Larchmont Mamaroneck, Hastings, Valhalla, Scarsdale, Peekskill, Ossining, Croton, Cortland.

You may see the map at this link, copy into your browser and hit “Go”:

https://apps.coned.com/stormcenter/external/default.ht ml

Mayor Roach urges residents who have lost power to contact Con Edison at 1-800 75CONED.

Mayor Roach said information on outages in our area and when you can expect power to be restored may be found at www.coned.com.

WPCNR has also learned from a resident that there are extensive power outages in the Yorktown-Peekskill area with downed trees on homes.

The winds, predicted to continue to rake the county until midnight, make the roads slippery with fallen debris and always the possibility of a tree or limb falling across a road at any time.

 

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Coyote Attack Reported at Muscoot Farm, Katonah. Not known if related to Hastings Attacks

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WPCNR HEALTH ALERT. From the Westchester County Health Department. March 1, 2018 6 PM: 

Farm staff at Muscoot Farm, Katonah, went to do morning farm chores today and noticed a sheep laying in the field and two others limping.  There was no sighting of a coyote, but the farm staff believe the attack was caused by one.

The attack on the sheep appears to have occurred in the early morning hours before farm staff had arrived. The veterinarian was called to take care of the two injured sheep.  The deceased sheep was buried in the pet cemetery on farm property.

The two who were hurt were moved into the barn to wait for the veterinarian to come.  The remainder of the sheep were moved inside the barn.

Following the veterinarian visit, the injured sheep were tended to with a follow up visit scheduled for later this week.

 

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