Posts Tagged ‘BGE’

BGE: More Outages This Year Than During 2010 Blizzards

Thursday, January 27th, 2011
Mike Murtha, 43, his son Sasha, 10, and daughter Kristina, 9, shovel snow in front of their home on Poplar Avenue in Arbutus, Md., on Thursday. (Photo by Maryland Newsline's Alexander Pyles)

Mike Murtha, 43, his son Sasha, 10, and daughter Kristina, 9, shovel snow in front of their home on Poplar Avenue in Arbutus, Md., on Thursday. (Photo by Maryland Newsline's Alexander Pyles)

ARBUTUS, Md. – As Mike Murtha worked with his family to clear the sidewalk and driveway at his home on Poplar Avenue, he couldn’t help but think how lucky he was.

Murtha, 43, never lost power at his southwest Baltimore County home as snow fell Wednesday afternoon and evening, though there were a few moments when he was nervous.

“We had some [light] flickers,” he said. “But we lucked out.”

Murtha wasn’t kidding; more Baltimore Gas and Electric customers lost power as a result of Wednesday’s snowstorm than in 2010’s back-to-back blizzards, a BGE statement said, because of the wet snow that dragged down trees and power lines.

As much as 12 inches of snow fell in some parts of the state, including Baltimore and Montgomery counties, the National Weather Service reported.

As of 2 p.m. Thursday afternoon, more than 12,000 customers remained without power in Baltimore County, a total exceeded only by Anne Arundel County’s 37,780 customers.

In total, nearly 77,000 BGE customers were still without power, less than half of the original total of more than 200,000 customers since Wednesday.

“We are working to get everyone back as safely and quickly as possible,” said Linda Foy, a BGE spokeswoman.

Foy said crews were on the way from Kentucky, Tennessee, Ohio and North Carolina to assist in the restoration of power, but some of those reinforcements may not arrive in the area until Friday. More than 1,000 BGE employees already in Maryland are working, she said.

Employees are working 12- to 16-hour shifts in the field, and at the storm center, call center and other locations, a BGE statement said.

Repairs have been slow in some areas, Foy said, because trucks may not be able to traverse tight side streets. Other equipment may not be accessible due to road conditions.

“There are some challenges,” Foy said. “Depending on the conditions or the situation, we may not necessarily have to wait [to restore power to an area], but if you’re not able to get your bucket truck, for instance … sometimes the crews will have to actually take the equipment they can carry.”

BGE has not provided an estimated completion time for all power restoration, Foy said, in part because that is dependent upon how quickly reinforcements arrive.

Meanwhile, Pepco announced that it expects all power to be restored in Montgomery and Prince George’s counties and Washington, D.C., by 11 p.m. Friday, its website said.

Montgomery was hit especially hard, and still had more than 113,000 customers without power Thursday afternoon. That’s more than 37 percent of Pepco’s total number of customers in that county.

Less than 12 percent of Pepco customers in Prince George’s County were without power as of Thursday afternoon, or about 22,000 people.

Less than 10 percent were without power in the District.

Even for those still with power, Thursday was a challenge. Will Sipes, of Arbutus, said he was one of the last on his block out to shovel the sidewalk.

“I’m the late guy,” he said, hat pulled tightly over his ears. Sipes said he likes snow but “not when it’s a lot.”

Murtha and his family, including 9-year-old Kristina and 10-year-old Sasha, who helped their father shovel the sidewalk Thursday afternoon, were just grateful there wasn’t as much snow on the ground as last year.

“Yeah, I like the snow, I like the thought of the snow,” Mike Murtha said. “This is easy compared to last year.”

His shoveling job was made easier, he said, by snow plows that hit his one-lane street earlier than usual. The road surface was largely without slush and stripped down to blacktop Thursday morning.

And Murtha had a theory for why his little street received such quick attention.

“I think it helps that [former Maryland governor Robert] Ehrlich used to live in Arbutus,” he said. “So I think he still has some pull.”

For real-time updates on outages, check BGE’s power outage map and Pepco’s outage map.

-By Maryland Newsline’s Alexander Pyles

Power Outages Expected, More Snow on Way

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

Thousands of Marylanders are still without power following last weekend’s blizzard, and officials say more outages could occur during the snowstorm expected to move into the region today.

Baltimore Gas & Electric Co. reported more than 98,000 power outages among its customers since Friday’s snowfall–most in Baltimore and Anne Arundel counties. As of Tuesday afternoon, 97,982 had been restored, leaving a little over 500 without power.

BGE has more than 1.26 million customers in Maryland.

Pepco fielded calls on about 108,000 power outages at the height of the storm, said Bob Hainey, Pepco manager of media relations. More than 80,000 of them were in the Montgomery County area.

“Montgomery County has a lot of trees,” Hainey said, “and once snow hits the trees, the power lines are next.”

Pepco restored more than 70,000 homes in Montgomery County. But as of Tuesday afternoon, there were 9,190 Montgomery County Pepco customers still without power, 255 in Prince George’s County and 193 in Washington, D.C., Hainey said.

Spokesmen for both companies said their crews are working around the clock to restore power.

BGE has “linemen from Kentucky, Tennessee and Ohio assisting us,” said BGE spokeswoman Linda Foy.

More power outages are expected today and tomorrow, officials said, when another 10 to 20 inches of snow are expected to fall in the region, topping the two or more feet that fell last weekend.

Hainey said those with existing power outages will be first priority and will not fall to the bottom of the queue.

If power goes out in your home, Foy urged using flashlights rather than candles, which are a safety hazard.

BGE also asks customers to clear vent pipes and outside meters, to prevent them from malfunctioning.

Hainey urged customers to be mindful of carbon monoxide, which can come from using charcoal grills too close to the house or operating portable generators improperly. Carbon monoxide can go undetected in a home because it’s without a smell.

“We tell people don’t do anything to project carbon monoxide, because it can kill you,” Hainey said.

By Maryland Newsline’s Zettler Clay