Pepco: Power Restoration Could Take Days
Thousands remain without power after a powerful storm Friday night.
Thousands of customers were without power following Friday night’s storm, and Pepco officials estimated that full power restoration could take days.
Lightning, rain and winds gusting up to 60 mph struck Montgomery and Prince George's counties overnight Friday.
As of 8 a.m. Saturday, the county estimated 210,000 Pepco customers remained without power out of 305,000 in Montgomery County. Some 500 out of 800 traffic signals were without power across the county, according to the county information offices, while trees and debris littered streets across the area.
The company issued the following announcement on its website, as calls for customer assistance continued to pour in Saturday.
Due to the widespread damage and the large number of outages, the power restoration effort is expected to take several days. Critical customers who need electricity for life support equipment are advised to seek shelter where power is available. The weather forecast for the Washington area calls for more thunderstorms today, which could cause additional outages.
“As soon as the storm passed, we had crews starting to assess the damage,” said Thomas H. Graham, president, Pepco Region. “We’ll continue conducting a comprehensive assessment, which we’ll use to strategically deploy crews. We’ll work full force and around the clock until every customer is restored.”
A 2011 national survey reported that Pepco had the least satisfied customers among 225 companies nationwide. Anger from customers in Montgomery County has brought the issue in front of the Montgomery County Council.
Are you without air-conditioning? Has a tree fallen to block your driveway? Upload your pictures of the storm damage to Patch.
Katie Griffith
11:05 am on Saturday, June 30, 2012
My apartment building seems to be the only building on Bradley Blvd in Chevy Chase with power, everything around me is closed.
jeannie
4:54 pm on Saturday, June 30, 2012
I also have power and I see folks need to be patient and seek Refuge with friends or family to avoid the extreme heat temps
chocolate_krys
7:50 pm on Sunday, July 1, 2012
It is extremely hard to stay patient when you are in a hot house with a newborn. Especially when you pay your PEPCO bill on time each month!
rumba101
6:29 pm on Saturday, June 30, 2012
Blessed to have power in Wheaton. Short drive to Silver Spring confirmed there was no power in homes and businesses almost the entire way.
Emil
9:23 pm on Saturday, June 30, 2012
I'm in takoma park without power and right up the block on Georgia ave they have power. Makes no sense.
Joe Thomas
10:30 pm on Monday, July 2, 2012
Its not that hard to figure out. Electricity does not travel in a straight line. It travels on transmission lines which are on circuits or "paths". People on one side of a street can have power while the other side is dark. That is just the way it is.
Patti
9:51 pm on Saturday, June 30, 2012
We now have power in Gaithersburg! I'm sure it's headed your way! :)
Sam
10:41 pm on Saturday, June 30, 2012
what kind of power company is so quick to say there wont be power for a week--we're worried about an elderly parent living along in silver spring and there's no sign of any effort to fix things no wonder they were rated the worst
MikeP
11:35 pm on Saturday, June 30, 2012
Interestingly, pakistan's power company is also called Pepco... But I imagine they have better service.
Seb James
11:39 pm on Saturday, June 30, 2012
We live on a steet in Bethesda with the only outlet blocked by a downed powerline. We cannot drive anywhere and have been told it will take a week to get the downed line out of the way.
Seb
Teal Britt
11:20 pm on Monday, July 2, 2012
Does Briarwood shopping center have power. I have a meeting there tomorrow should I come out from my area which is East of Wheaton? Email me plz let me know tt.brittain@gmail.com