Feiner: Con Ed Puts Westchester Last In Line for Power-Up. Calls for National G

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WPCNR THE FEINER REPORT. From Paul Feiner, Town of Greenburgh Supervisor. (EDITED) March 15, 2010: Paul Feiner, Greenburgh Town Supervisor complained tonight that Con Ed is putting Westchester last on the list of communities that are getting their power restored.


A press release sent out by Con Ed on Monday night indicated that all of Brooklyn, Queens and the Bronx will get back power Wednesday. Staten Island will get back power Thursday and Westchester will get back power on Friday. This is unfair. Feiner said in a news release: Con Ed should be giving equal treatment to all counties that are impacted by the power outages.




Greenburgh Town Supervisor Paul Feiner announced that he is asking Governor David Patterson to call in the National Guard to speed up restoration of Con Ed power outages.

 


Greenburgh Town Supervisor Paul Feiner announced that he is asking Governor David Patterson to call in the National Guard to speed up restoration of Con Ed power outages. Feiner said that thousands of Greenburgh & Westchester residents are still out of power. Restoration of power in Greenburgh is progressing slowly. Some residents have reported that their power has been restored. But, many Greenburgh residents are still out of power.  Trees are still down, roads are still closed, wires are down. It’s dangerous, Feiner’s release said.

 

Feiner explained: the National Guard should be used to help Con Ed restoration teams get power back on and to help localities clean up the debris,  remove downed trees. We have residents in the town who can’t get out of their driveways because trees are blocking their driveways. If the National Guard provided local governments & Con Ed with assistance we could get back in shape much faster. The National Guard could also be used to direct traffic at locations where traffic lights are not working.

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County Exec Astorino Works with Governor for Disaster Aid.

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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From Westchester County Department of Communications. March 15, 2010 (EDITED) : In the aftermath of this weekend’s devastating rain and wind storm, County Executive Robert P. Astorino today met with Gov. Paterson, FEMA representatives and Con Edison officials, as the county’s Department of Emergency Services began efforts to qualify the county for federal disaster aid.


At a meeting earlier in the day at the county’s Emergency Operations Center in Hawthorne, Astorino briefed Paterson on the damage. The two executives also heard directly from Con Edison on its ongoing efforts to restore power throughout the county. Others present were representatives of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), the state police, the county’s police and department of Emergency Services and the state Department of Transportation.   


If Westchester is declared a disaster area by President Obama, it could bring grants and low-interest loans to businesses and residents. This last happened for Westchester in 2007, when torrential rains flooded parts of the county.



Local governments will be gathering information on storm-related damage and turning these reports  over to the county. The state Superintendent of Insurance has a special hotline for storm-related claims: 1-800-342-3736.  Those impacted by the storm are advised to take photos of their damage and hold on to receipts that document damage.


To obtain federal assistance for municipal infrastructure damage, the threshold is $2.9 million in losses.  The state as a whole must document $25 million in losses. The information is forwarded by the state to FEMA and then to the president.


“Con Ed told us that in Westchester and New York City 173,000 customers were without power at some point – more than the number affected by Hurricane Gloria in 1985,” Astorino said.


The main cause was not the rain, but the winds that ripped trees from the ground, smashing electric wires.



 


Astorino reminded residents to stay away from downed wires and to notify their local police departments of any  wires.  People without electric power should make sure they notify Con Ed


directly by calling 1-800-75-CONED; those with access to power may make a report via the company’s Web  site: www.coned.com. (People should not assume that the utility knows of their outage.)


People without power in the NYSEG area (parts of northern Westchester) should call 1-800-572-1131.


For non-emergency matters, residents can call United Way’s 2-1-1 line for help. This helpline will have information about dry ice locations, road closures and any warming centers that may have been set up by local communities.  Hours of operations are 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., seven days a week. If you have trouble accessing 2-1-1, you may call 1-800-899-1479.


 


 

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Town of Greenburgh Reports on Their Con Edison Situation, Roads

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WPCNR THE POWER NEWS. From Town of Greenburgh Supervisor Paul Feiner. March 15, 2010: I received the following update from the police chief. I’m disappointed that progress has been so slow and will be asking Con Ed to assign more resources to Greenburgh. (6,500 are without power). We apologize for the inconveniences.



Please be advised that we are opening up the Theodore Young Community Center tonight as a shelter for those without power. The phone of the center (32 Manhattan Ave) is 989 3600.  


If you know of an elderly resident/disabled resident who you are worried about who you can’t contact and who may be out of power – please advise and we’ll check up on them. I am very sorry that so many Greenburgh residents are being inconvenienced during this storm and appreciate what you are experiencing.Please feel free to call me on my cell: 438 1343 (I don’t have power at home so my home phone isn’t working).


Here are the road closures of of 3:30 P.M. in the Town of Greenburgh:



We are coordinating with all Fire Departments, Department of Public Works and a representative from Con Edison from our Emergency Operations Center.   We have made some progress in opening roads that have been closed since March 13.   Power Company Crews from out of state are now arriving and are being assigned to local problems.  Almost every area of the town has experienced substantial  damage to homes and vehicles.


 Unfortunately Con Edison reports 6,500 customers in Greenburgh are without power.  We have assigned extra officers to patrol these areas.  New reports of trees and wires down have slowed down which will allow all resources involved to concentrate on previously reported incidents.


 

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Senator Gillibrand Calls for Fed Damage Assessment of NY Storm Aftermath

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WPCNR WATCH ON THE POTOMAC. From United States Senator Kirsten Gillibrand’s Office. March 15,2010: After a weekend of extreme weather that killed several people and left more than half a million New Yorkers without power, U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand today urged the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to provide federal assistance to conduct a Preliminary Damage Assessment for Suffolk, Nassau, Westchester, Rockland and Orange Counties, and all five boroughs of New York City that were ravaged by this weekend’s storms.



In her letter to FEMA Administrator William Fugate, Senator Gillibrand explained that more than half a million homes and businesses across New York had lost power at some point, and more than 250,000 were still without power. Several people have been killed, countless homes and buildings are ruined, and infrastructure is badly damaged – leaving many families isolated from quick relief. In addition, Long Island’s beaches have taken a substantial hit across the north and south shores, leaving homes, roads and dunes vulnerable.

“New York residents should not be left shouldering all of the costs from this storm.  The federal government must step in immediately to help residents in New York City, Long Island, and the Lower Hudson Valley,” Senator Gillibrand said. “Local utilities have reported that the weekend nor’easter was the worst storm in 20 years. Thousands of trees are down in communities throughout the region, with dramatic cleanup costs in areas that have already sustained significant losses from previous storms.

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Bryant Gardens Without Power Since Saturday Night

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WPCNR THE POWER NEWS. From Lou Bruno, President, Bryant Gardens  March 15, 2010 (This is a letter sent by the leader of the Bryant Gardens cooperative on Bryant Avenue to Mayor Adam Bradley, it is one plight of just one of hundreds of apartment complexes around Westchester County that are without power.):


Adam

Thank you for taking quick action to restore power and services in White Plains after the storm.

I am writing to inform you of the outages at Bryant Gardens in the hope that together we can improve the priority of our Con Ed service ticket (WE10046590).

Roughly half of Bryant Gardens — Buildings 1 – 7, with 196 families, including all street and outdoor lights — has had no power since Saturday night.  The affected buildings are serviced by an oil-fired central boiler used for heat (a hot water system) and domestic hot water that can’t be run until power is restored.  Electricity is needed for the pumps in the boiler room (208, 3-phase) that distribute the hot water and pumps in the buildings that circulate the water.

Unlike families in one and two-family residences, that may have alternatives, ours have no safe way to heat their apartments or generate hot water for washing and bathing.

Many — about one-third — of our residents are senior citizens with limited means and greater needs for heat and hot water than others.

The buildings without power get it from a feeder entering the complex from Bryant Ave at the beginning of Bryant Crescent.  Two of our buildings are on Bryant Ave and have power, although one has no heat and hot water.  The other six buildings get power from a Bryant Ave feeder entering at the end of Bryant Crescent and have power.

Buildings 1-7 have no power because a large tree was uprooted by the storm, fell across Bryant Crescent, and severed the power lines on the other side of the roadway.  Save-A-Tree was engaged and cleared the roadway within a few hours after the tree fell.  A Con-Ed “safety representative” appeared on site this morning and has cordoned off the roadway until repair crews can arrive.

We hope you’ll be able to use this information to get Con Ed to assign a higher priority to the large number of Bryant Gardens residents without services, including 60-70 senior citizen families.

Thanks for your help!


Best regards,

Louis J. Bruno, President
Bryant Gardens Corporation

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12 hours go by — 67,811 Con Ed County Customers Out — ONE Crew for WP

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WPCNR THE POWER NEWS. March 15,2010: As the forecast for windy10 to 30 mile per hour conditions threatened more tree fellings, Monday morning  as Westchester approachs 12 noon, there are 67,811Con Edison customers without power.


The City of White Plains Communications Director Antoinette Biordi said that Con Edison has advised the city White Plains will be restored by Thursday and the remainder of the city on Friday.


Ms. Biordi said Con Edison has not responded to Mayor Adam Bradley’s pleas yesterday afternoon for more than the one Con Edison wire removal crew currently assigned to the city. “The DPW is right behind the crew,” on their wire clearance process through the city, Biordi told WPCNR, “it takes hours.”


Con Edison announced they will be distributing dry ice in the Saxon Woods Pool parking lot on Mamaroneck Avenue beginning at 12 noon. Residents can use the dry ice to place in their refrigerators to preserve food supplies.


According to the Con Edison Storm Center status grid, the four communities hardest hit at noon continue to be Yonkers, 12,016 out; Greenburgh, 10,289; New Rochelle, 7,732; and White Plains, 6,691.


In White Plains, 697 customers were restored overnight since 11 P.M. Sunday night.


Con Edison announced they will be distributing dry ice in the Saxon Woods Pool parking lot on Mamaroneck Avenue beginning at 12 noon. Residents can use the dry ice to place in their refrigerators to preserve food supplies.


Elsewhere, residents have been piling into local hotels as their homes are without heat due to the power losses.


Around the county, according to Con Edison’s Storm Center statistics as of 12 noon, almost all of Scarsdale is out, with 6,290 customers afffected; Mamaroneck/Larchmont,3,790; Eastchester, 3,893; Harrison, 3,080; North Castle, 1,464; Mount Pleasant,649; Tarrytown, 1,347; Rye City, 2,269; Port Chester, 1,490; Irvington,2,093;  Hastings,1,659; Ardsley, 763.


 

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Should Con Ed Be Required to Establish Own Massive Emergency Repair Crews

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WPCNR THE POWER SURVEY. March 15, 2010: As the “Storm with No Name” continues to make life miserable for Westchester County, the revelation last night by Con Edison that the out-of-state emergency repair crews they always rely on in the aftermath of devastating storm damage come “when they can” and when the out-of-state emergency crews can come is something that no one knew.


Here was a storm that the Weather Channel, the local Accuweather boys and weather alarmists were saying last Wednesday was going to have high winds and gale force potential, 50 miles per hour at least. 48 hours warning.


Con Edison had well-in-advance warning. The Storm with No Name came in Friday night grew in intensity all day Saturday, damage started piling up across the region by twilight Saturday night and we went from 11,000 customers out at 6 P.M. to 70,000 customers out in Westchester alone by Sunday morning, double the outages experienced four weeks ago in the blizzard.


Early Saturday night Con Edison decided to call in emergency crews from outlying states, which are arriving Monday, 48 hours later. Westchester is supposed to turn on by the end of the week.


However, the crews in the middle west coming in had clear weather the middle of last week. Con Edison told WPCNR late Sunday evening, the emergency crews “were reluctant” to commit their crews to Con Edison and leave their areas unprotected.


Well, the damage done by this storm which flirted with a Force 1 hurricane intensity at times (75 miles per hour sustained winds puts you in the “Big Storm League”) speaks volumes about how awesome in terms of what a Force 2 or Force 3 hurricane would do in the county and the devastation that under the present system, Con Edison and all the emergency crews in surrounding regions would simply not be able to correct for months.


With trees still lying across roads and only one Con Edison crew working White Plains according to the city, it is clear that the policians, the Public Service Commission, the Legislature have to address Con Edison and other power companies inability to handle major disasters efficiently.


Granted Con Edison did a solid job in the blizzard four weeks ago, but the blizzard only blew in the 30 to 35 mile an hour wind range.


It is time that Con Edison got some help. If Con Edison cannot call in Emergency Forces to tidy up fallen live wires in an efficient manner because they do not have relief crews, even when they have 48 hours advance notice, when can they? When will they ever?


What is needed is a force that either Con Edison maintains, or works with fire departments to train the local fire departments to remove the wires, or a division of the National Guard is trained to deploy into hard-hit devastated areas. It is clear that the parocial interests of crews from other states with obvious divided responsibilities cannot respond fast enough to handle emergencies everywhere where power outages are concerned. And this is not a knock on those great guys from Virginia, Pennsylvania, Tennessee who have helped us in the past. This is about the practicality.


What do Mr. and Mrs. White Plains think….and Mr. and Mrs. Westchester, all70,000 customers who are waiting for the sight of relief; the fire departments and Departments of Public Works waiting for a “Con Ed man?” 


Tell the hand-wringing legislators and bureaucrats who are responsible for what passes for “emergency preparedness” that it is time Westchester could handle a large outage a lot faster than they can do under the present system.


ONE crew helping White Plains the last 36 hours as was revealed in yesterday’s city hall meeting in White Plains means you have a system that can’t work when this area is hit with a really big storm.


Tell us what you think in the poll at the right.

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Emergency Supplemental Crews Reluctant to Send in Repair Teams in Advance

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WPCNR THE POWER NEWS. By John F. Bailey. March 15, 2010: In response to a question from WPCNR why, Con Edison had not gotten emergency out-of-state reciprocal aid crews into the metropolitan area in advance when every  weather forecaster was predicting high winds and heavy rains  and 24 hours of strong continued winds approaching gale force almost 48 hours in advance of the storm’s beginning, a Con Edison spokesperson said out of state crews were “reluctant” to release crews to aid Westchester and New York City before they knew their own crews would not be needed.


Alan Drury, Con Edison spokesperson, said Con Edison sent out their first calls for out-of-state crews early Saturday evening when over 11,000 Westchester customers had already lost power after a day of winds that did not let up and got stronger through Saturday evening. As of Sunday morning at 8 A.M., 70,000 Westchester Customers were without power.


Drury said that there would be 210 crews into the area Monday, but he could not commit an extra repair crew to White Plains. He said areas would be assessed Monday morning and would be prioritized as to how many crews would be assigned “based on the sensitivity of the areas.”

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It’s 11 P.M. E.D.T.: 79,000 Westchester Customers Without Power.

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WPCNR THE POWER NEWS. From Con Edison Media Relations. (EDITED) March 14, 2010:


Con Edison crews continue responding to outages caused by a powerful storm that knocked trees and limbs into power lines throughout New York City and Westchester County. Approximately 187,000 customers were affected by the storm, far exceeding the number of outages caused by Hurricane Gloria in 1985, when 110,515 customers lost power.


As of 6 p.m. Sunday evening, the company had restored power to approximately 67,000 customers. Approximately 120,000 customers remained without power: 79,000 in Westchester County, 24,000 in Staten Island, 8,800 in the Bronx, 6,000 in Queens, 2,000 in Brooklyn, and about 100 in Manhattan.


Around Westchester County, of the 79,000 customers reporting outages, the areas with the most customers reporting outages continue to be Yonkers, 11,903; New Rochelle, 8,494; Greenburgh, 8,429; White Plains, 7,388; Mount Vernon, 6,372; Scarsdale, 5,870; Harrison, 4,014,Mamaroneck/Larchmont, 2,566; and Eastchester, 3,763.


Con Edison expects restoration to last throughout the week. The company has been securing mutual aid from utilities in several states, including Ohio, Pennsylvania, Georgia and Massachusetts.


Con Edison has approximately 210 restoration crews now in the field, in addition to other field support personnel clearing roads and trees. The number of restoration crews is expected to grow to 350 tomorrow and 425 on Wednesday as more out-of-state crews arrive.


Con Edison has additional customer service representatives, electrical and construction crews, along with tree-clearing crews working around the clock to respond to customers and power outages that may occur.


Customers are urged to call Con Edison immediately to report any outages at 1-800-75-CONED (1-800-752-6633). Customers can also report power interruptions or service problems at www.conEd.com and on their cell phones and PDAs. When reporting an outage, customers should have their Con Edison account number available, if possible, and report whether their neighbors also have lost power.

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Shelter in Greenburgh for People Without Power

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WPCNR THE POWER NEWS.From Town of Greenburgh Supervisor Paul Feiner. March 14, 2010 UPDATED 11:35 P.M. E.D.T.: If you are cold and have no power– consider staying at the Theodore Young Community Center tonight. The center is located at 32 Manhattan Ave (near Crossroads Shopping Center, off 119–a few minutes from Dobbs Ferry Road). Just spoke with Deputy Commissioner James Robinson who advised me that the center will be open. We have showers at the center, it’s warm and we’re trying to get cots so residents can have a good nights sleep. Best of all the price is right: FREE!


The following is the most recent list of trees down and road closures.  We estimate that there are 6900 homes without power at the present time in Greenburgh. Please be patient, don’t touch wires. The ground is still soft. It’s still dangerous and you are better off home. We are in constant contact with Con Ed and hope to make significant progress tomorrow getting power restored:






Trees down and road closures,


Sector 1      Sector 4


Caterson/East Hartsdale ave    Milton st


Caterson/Holland      joyce


E.hartsdale/Columbia     stonewall cir


Ifo 12 maplewood     crest dr


Sector 2      Sector 5


Barford lane      south rd/washington


Withington ln      south rd/polk pl


Chedworth ln      edgepark/old kensico


Kempster rd      old tarrytown/old kensico


Barclay rd      Randolph/miller


Walbrooke rd      old kensico west of kent


Glenwood rd      county ctr/Jackson pl


Norwood rd


Edgemont rd from norwood to Ardsley rd  Sector 6


n.payne


Sector 3      lamont


Clayton rd      nepperhan


Evendale rd      


Glendale      Sector 7


Underhill east of fort hill    rockingchair at pomander


Sprain valley rd     surrey way at rockingchair


Fort hill south of Ardsley rd    hartsdale rd at Robert ln


Power outage


Orchard hill section


Mayfair Acres


Wyndover woods


Boulder Ridge


Secor rd west of Sprain Pkwy


Hillside ave


Edgemont


Payne st


Westchester view rd

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