When will the power return? Weary Carolinas residents long for relief
after Helene's fury
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[October 05, 2024]
By JEFF AMY
ASHEVILLE, N.C. (AP) — The weary and worn residents of Julianne
Johnson's neighborhood in Asheville have been getting by without
electricity since Hurricane Helene tore through the Southeast last week
and upended their lives. They've been cooking on propane stoves and
using dry erase boards to keep up with local happenings while wondering
when the lights would come back on.
Johnson, who has a 5-year-old son and works for a land conservation
group, received a text from Duke Energy promising her power would be
restored by Friday night. But as of midday, utility poles and wires were
still draped at odd angles across the streets, pulled down by mangled
trees.
“I have no idea what’s next,” said Johnson, whose family does have some
power thanks to a generator. “Just the breadth of this over the whole
region, it’s kind of amazing.”
She and her neighbors have been taking care of each other since Helene
came ashore Sept. 26 as a Category 4 hurricane and carved a path of
destruction as it moved northward from Florida, killing at least 220
people in six states, including at least 72 in Buncombe County, which
includes Asheville. Block captains set out whiteboards with information
about who can provide first aid and where to get tools repaired.
Nearly 700,000 homes and businesses — mostly in the Carolinas and
Georgia — were still without electricity Friday, according to
poweroutage.us. That's an improvement over the more than 2 million
customers without power five days ago, and Duke Energy, the dominant
provider in North Carolina, said it hoped to have the lights back on by
Sunday night for many of its affected customers. But for roughly 100,000
customers in places with catastrophic damage, it could be next week or
longer, according to company spokesperson Bill Norton.
“We’re talking about places where the homes no longer exist,” Norton
said, adding that some roads where utility poles once stood have been
completely washed away.
The company said it would miss its Friday goal of restoring power to
almost all of its customers in South Carolina, and it was now shooting
for Sunday. Dominion Energy also said it would take longer than
initially expected to restore power to the hardest hit counties in the
state.
Utility work is slow going
Along Swannanoa River Road on Asheville’s east side, Duke Energy and its
contractors spread out Friday afternoon to set about 20 new electricity
poles in an area where floodwaters snapped or swept away many of the old
ones.
David Martin, who has done engineering work for Duke for three decades
in the area, said the damage is far worse than anything he has seen
before.
“Repairing, most of your facility is there, it’s just putting wire back
up, normally,” Martin said. “In this case we’ve got to start all new —
new poles, new wires, new transformers, new services, everything. It’s
all been washed out.”
Just digging the hole and placing one pole can take up to two hours,
Martin said. And that doesn’t count the time needed to attach equipment
or string the lines. The company can’t use a drill-like boring machine
to dig many of the holes along the road because of underground
utilities.
“A lot of them, you have to hand-dig the holes because there are gas
lines,” Martin said.
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Personnel from Urban Search and Rescue Utah Task Force 1 work in the
aftermath of Hurricane Helene, Friday, Oct. 4, 2024, in Erwin, Tenn.
(AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)
While there were a few pre-storm poles that workers were trying to
save, much of the infrastructure was totally gone. Some of Duke’s
lines were washed into the middle of a fairway on the city golf
course, tangled up with utility poles and trees.
And like in many places in western North Carolina, someone must
first rebuild the washed-out road before the utility can finish
restoring the line.
Dreaming of a hot shower
The storm damaged water utilities so severely and over such a wide
area that one federal official said it “could be considered
unprecedented.” Repairs could take weeks.
The lack of clean running water just added to Asheville's woes.
“I would love a shower,” said Sue Riles, who lives in the
tourist-friendly city known for its art galleries, shops and
breweries. “Running water would be incredible.”
Even water that’s unfit to drink is scarce. Some people have been
hauling buckets from a creek to flush their toilets. Officials also
are advising people to collect nondrinkable water for household
needs from a local swimming pool.
Without full repairs to the water systems, schools might not be able
to resume in-person classes, hospitals might not restore normal
operations and hotels and restaurants might not fully reopen.
Lives lost across the Southeast
In Florida, a dozen people died in the Tampa area, with the worst
damage on the narrow, 20-mile (32-kilometer) string of barrier
islands that stretch from St. Petersburg to Clearwater.
“The water, it just came so fast,” said Dave Behringer, who rode out
the storm in his home after telling his wife to flee. “Even if you
wanted to leave, there was no getting out.”
Among the dead was Aiden Bowles, a retired restaurant owner who
didn't want to leave his Indian Rocks Beach home on a barrier island
north of St. Petersburg. Caregiver Amanda Normand begged the
71-year-old widower to stay with her inland.
“He said, ‘It’s going to be fine. I’m going to go to bed,’” Normand
said of their final phone call the night of Sept. 26.
In North Carolina, exhausted rescue crews and volunteers continued
to navigate past washed out roads, downed power lines and mudslides
to reach the isolated and the missing. In Buncombe County, officials
said Friday, about 75 active missing persons cases remained.
“We know these are hard times, but please know we’re coming,”
Buncombe Sheriff Quentin Miller said. “We’re coming to get you.
We’re coming to pick up our people.”
___
Associated Press journalists Gary D. Robertson, in Raleigh, North
Carolina; Jeffrey Collins in Columbia, South Carolina; and John
Seewer in Toledo, Ohio, contributed to this report.
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