With 7.4 million without power, utility
workers get respect
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[September 12, 2017]
By Bernie Woodall and Scott DiSavino
Fort Lauderdale and New York (Reuters) -
When more than 7.4 million homes and businesses are without power after
a hurricane, utility workers tend to get noticed a bit more than usual.
That’s what Gus Beyersdorf, 40, and his colleague Nick Jensen, 32,
utility workers from Wisconsin, found out while inspecting power lines
in Florida on Monday. The two - among the thousands of power-line
workers brought in from out-of-state by major utilities - spent about
five minutes outside a house in Fort Lauderdale, when two cars with
women who said they lived in the neighborhood stopped to inquire about
the return of power to their homes - obviously trying to get their
attention.
“I think you guys are sexy. Men in hard hats are attractive!” said one
of the women, obviously just joking with the Wisconsin men, but also
making it clear that she would like it if they would get the power
turned back on at her house.
Major utilities in the state - including Florida Power & Light Co, Duke
Energy Corp and Tampa Electric - have mobilized tens of thousands of
workers to deal with the enormous power outages, which by Monday evening
numbered more than 7.4 million homes and businesses after Hurricane Irma
landed as a Category 4 storm early Sunday.
While the numbers in Florida were declining slightly, more outages were
being reported in Georgia and other states as Irma, now a tropical
storm, moved north.
Beyersdorf and Jensen left northern Wisconsin on Friday morning and
raced to southern Florida to be in place ahead of Irma’s impact. Between
2,000 and 3,000 utility workers from out-of-state are staying at BB&T
Stadium in Broward County, which is home to the National Hockey League’s
Florida Panthers, said Beyersdorf.
Power losses in Georgia, which were nearing 900,000 as of 3 p.m. EDT,
were expected to increase as the storm moved north.
In Florida, the state's biggest electric company said its outages dipped
to 3.3 million from a peak of 3.6 million earlier on Monday. A total of
almost 4.5 million Florida Power & Light customers have been affected by
the storm, with about 1 million getting service restored, mostly by
automated devices.
"We've never had that many outages, and I don't think any utility in the
country ever has," FPL Chief Executive Eric Silagy said at a news
conference on Monday. "It is by far and away the largest in the history
of our company."
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A lifeguard hut is pictured as Hurricane Irma arrives in Hollywood,
Florida. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri
FPL said it was still assessing the damage and could not yet say
when it would restore service to most customers. Some homes and
businesses could be without power for weeks, especially in the
hardest-hit areas like southwest Florida, the NextEra Energy Inc
unit said.
“It took a week for Matthew,” Jensen said, referring to a hurricane
that last year did not make landfall in Florida but caused power
outages. "This one is going to take a lot longer."
As Irma pushed north, outage figures were increasing at other large
utilities, including units of Duke Energy, Southern Co and Emera
Inc.
Duke's outages held around 1.2 million on Monday evening, while
Emera's Tampa Electric utility said outages eased to about 320,000
from a peak earlier on Monday of over 330,000.
FPL said its two nuclear plants were safe. Both units at its Turkey
Point facility, about 30 miles (48 km) south of Miami, were shut by
early Monday.
At its St. Lucie nuclear plant about 120 miles (190 km) north of
Miami, FPL reduced power at Unit 1 because of salt buildup from Irma
in the switchyard, NRC spokesman Roger Hannah said. The plant's
other reactor, Unit 2, continued to operate at full power.
Irma is expected to sap demand for fuel for a time, Goldman Sachs
analysts said in a note on Monday, but they cautioned that supply
could remain strained because of refining capacity offline after
Hurricane Harvey, which hit Texas two weeks ago.
(Additional reporting by Timothy Gardner in Washington, David Gaffen
and Jessica Resnick-Ault in New York and Ruthy Munoz in Houston;
Editing by Peter Cooney and Jonathan Oatis)
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