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		<title>Thousands in North Carolina county still without power</title>
		<link>https://cincylink.com/2023/06/18/thousands-in-north-carolina-county-still-without-power/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 18 Jun 2023 04:10:21 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[People living in one North Carolina county are still without power three days after two power substations were damaged by gunfire. According to poweroutage.us, more than 37,000 Moore County residents are still without power as of early Tuesday afternoon. The outages began just after 7 p.m. Saturday after someone pulled up and opened fire on &#8230;]]></description>
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<p>People living in one North Carolina county are still without power three days after two power substations were damaged by gunfire.</p>
<p>According to poweroutage.us, more than 37,000 Moore County residents are still without power as of early Tuesday afternoon.</p>
<p>The outages began just after 7 p.m. Saturday after someone pulled up and opened fire on the substations, which are owned by Duke Energy, Moore County Sheriff Ronnie Fields said Sunday at a news conference, the Associated Press reported.</p>
<p>In response to the outages, a state of emergency was announced, including a curfew from 9 p.m. Sunday to 5 a.m. Monday, the Associated Press reported.</p>
<p>Moore County Schools, which was closed Monday, remained closed Tuesday, the district said in a tweet.</p>
<p>Fields said the incident is being investigated as a criminal act, adding that "it was targeted," the news outlet reported. </p>
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<br /><a href="https://www.wcpo.com/news/national/thousands-in-north-carolina-still-without-power-after-shootings-at-power-substations">Source link </a></p>
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		<title>An Icy Mess</title>
		<link>https://cincylink.com/2022/02/03/an-icy-mess/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 03 Feb 2022 06:47:17 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[WLWT News 5 Chief Meteorologist An Icy Mess Updated: 12:30 AM EST Feb 3, 2022 Hide Transcript Show Transcript EVEN TALK ABOUT THAT SECOND PART . KEVIN TALKING ABOUT THIS WEEKEND WEATHER, COMING IN RAIN, TRANSITIONING INTO ICE AND EVENTUALLY SNOW. KEVIN: WE GOT SOME INTERESTING WEATHER. IT WILL BE INTERESTING TO SEE HOW THINGS &#8230;]]></description>
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					<a class="article-byline--details-position" href="/news-team/8a0ad9b8-c4c3-4402-9189-77c5cfc266dc"><br />
						WLWT News 5 Chief Meteorologist<br />
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<p>An Icy Mess</p>
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					Updated: 12:30 AM EST Feb 3, 2022
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											EVEN TALK ABOUT THAT SECOND PART . KEVIN TALKING ABOUT THIS WEEKEND WEATHER, COMING IN RAIN, TRANSITIONING INTO ICE AND EVENTUALLY SNOW. KEVIN: WE GOT SOME INTERESTING WEATHER. IT WILL BE INTERESTING TO SEE HOW THINGS PLAY OUT BECAUSE THERE’S SO MANY LITTLE NUANCES. FOR EXAMPLE, JUST THE SLIGHTEST SHIFT IN 50 TO 75 MILES COULD CHANGE THE FORECAST A DEGREE HERE, A DEGREE THERE, BUT CHECK THIS IMAGE OUT -- THIS IS DOWNTOWN CINCINNATI. I KNOW YOU CANNOT SEE BECAUSE IT IS OBSCURED BY CLOUDS, BUT WHY IS IT LOOKING LIKE THAT? WE’VE GOT THAT ARCTIC FRONT RIGHT ON TOP OF US AS WE SPEAK, DAN YOU CAN SEE IT REFLECTED IN THE TEMPERATURES. MASON HAS BEEN STEADILY DROPPING, SO THE FRONT BASICLYAL BISECTS HAMILTON COUNTY RIGHT NOW, AND AS SOON AS IT CROSSES, TEMPERATURES DROP ABOUT 10 DEGRSEE JT USLIKE THAT. YOU ARE AHEAD OF THE FRONT TO THE EAST. LOOK AT BATAAVI AT 46. HAMILTON, HARRISON, YOU ARE CLEARLY BEHIND THE FRONT, AND IT DROPS BELOW FREEZING UP TOWARDS OXFORD, BROOKVILLE, AND OUT TOWARDS BASSFORD, SO THE COLDER AIR IS ON THE MOVE. THOSE CLOUDS WILL BE GONE IN THE NEXT HALF AN HOUR AS THE FRONT CLEARS AND THAT COLDER AIR MOVES IN. WE HAVE HAD RAIN ALL EVENING ACROSS THE AREA. THAT WILL CONTINUE. ALTHOUGH THE TRANSITION IS TAKING PLACE AS TEMPERATURES ARE DROPPING BELOW FREEZING, BUT BEFOREOU YET G OVERLY CONCERNED, THERE’S GOING TO BE A LET IN THE STEADY RAIN OVERNIGHT TONIGHT, SO THAT’S ANOTHER REASON WHY I THINK THERE WILL BE A LITTLE BIT  AOF LOW -- A LITTLE BIT OF A LLLU IN THE DETERIORATION OF ROADS. I ALWSAYAY S WATCH YOUR BRIDGES, THOUGH. THEY ALWAYS ICE UP FIRST, BUT I THINK THE MNAI ROADS ARE OK FOR THE MAJORITY OF THE NIGHT. THE REST OF THE RADAR SHOWS RAIN ACROSS KENCKTUY. RAIN THROUGH OUR EASTERN COMMUNITSIE FROM WEST UNION UP TOWARD WILMINGTON. WE WILL COINNTUE TO WATCH THE TRANSITION FROM RAIN OVER TO FREEZING RAIN AS WE GO THROUGH THE REMAINDER OF THE NIGHT TONIGHT. AS THOSE TEMPERATURES FALL, AGAIN, IT LOOKS LIKE FREEZING RAIN AND HEAVY SLEET TORROWOM IN AND AROUND THE METRO ABOUT A QUARTER OF AN INCH OF ICE. THAT IS ENOUGH TO CREA ATE FEW SPOTTY POWER OUTAGES, ESPECIALLY WHEN YOU FACTOR IN THE WIND, BUT I THINK THE MORE DAMINAGG ICE IS JUST TO THE SOUTHND A EAST OF US HERE IN CINCINNATI, SO WE ARE DODGING A LITTLE BIT OF A BULLET WITH THA T.SLEET TO HAVE THE GREATEST PAIMCT AROUND HERE. THE 275 LOOP, THE I-75 CORRIDOR. IN FACT, I THINK IT REALLY CUTS INTO YOUR SNOWFALLOTAL TS. AGAIN, THE WIND WILL BE AN ISSUE WITH ANY ICEN O TREES, AND THAT COULD, OF COURSE, MAKE THE SITUATION WITH POWER A LITTLE MORE CRITICAL OUT THERE, ESPECIALLY AS YOU GET INTO THIS EAAR IN PINK. THIS IS WHERE YOU WILL HAVE DAMAGING ICE, I THINK, FROM PASRT OF ROWAN COUNTY, MAYBE INTO THE SOUTHERN PARTS OF HIGHLAND COUNTY. PEOPLES, GEORGETOWN, MAYSVILLE, BE ON THE LOOKOUT. THE GREATER PART OF THE TRI-STATE,HE T HEART OF THE TRI-STATE, ONE TO THREE INCHES OF  SNOW, A QUARTER INCH OF ICE, AND A LOT OF SLEET. THAT’S WHY I TNKHI WE HAVE CUT DOWN ON THESE SNOWFALL TOTALS FOR THE METRO. FARTHER NORTH AND WEST, BROOKVILLE, OXFORD, PARTS OF FRANKLIN, BUTLER COUNTY, COULD SEE HALF A FOOT OF SNOW IN THOSE AREAS. WATCH HOW THE TRANSITION PLAYS OUT. YOU SEE THE BREAK THERE. TOWARDS MORNING, THE FREEZING RAIN BECOMES MORE STEADY AGAIN. AT THIS POINT, TEMPERATURES ARE IN  THE UPPER 20’S. I KEEP SAYING I REALLY THINK IT IS MIDMORNING BEFORE CONDITIONS REALLY GO DOWNHILL, BUT WATCH THE BRIDGES FIRST THING IN THE MORNING. BUT THEN IT LOOKS LIKE HEAVY FREEZING RAIN AND SLEET FOR THE BETTER PTAR OF THE AFTERNOON, SOME SNOW IN OUR FAR NORTHWEST, AND THIS AREA IN BLUE WHICH APPEARS TO BE SNOW I STILL THINK WILLE B SLEET. THAT’S THE REASON WHY WE KEEP THOSE SNOWFALL TOTALS DOWN, AND I THINK THE MOST IMPACTFUL SNOWS MAY NOT GET HERE UNTIL LATE TOMORROW AND THEN THROUGH FRIDAY MORNING WITH SOME FAT, FLUFFY FLAKES TTHA COULD PILE UP A QUICK ONE TO THREE INCHES OF SNOW FOR US ON FRIYDA MORNING, LATE THURSDAY NIGHT/FRIDAY MORNING BEFOREE W BEGIN TCLO EAR OUT AND IT TURNS VERY COLD BEHIND THIS STORM. WE ARE DOWN TO 29 BY MORNING WITH RAIN TO FREEZING RAIN. TOMORROW, OBVIOUSLY A WEATHER ALERT DAY. AN ICY MIX OF FREEZING RAINND HEAVY SLEET GOING OVER TO SNOW BY EVENING. AGAIN, PICK ANY PART OF THE DAY, THE WEATHER IS GOING TO BE PRETTY IMPACTFUL TOMORROW, BUT TOMOOWRR NIGHT INTO FRIDAY MORNING, JUST A MESS ON THE ROADS. SEVEN-DAY FORECAST, DOWN TO 18 TOMORROW NIGHT, THEN DOWN TO ONE,
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					A winter storm will bring an icy mix to the Tri-State before ending as snow.
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					<strong class="dateline">CINCINNATI —</strong> 											</p>
<p>A winter storm will bring an icy mix to the Tri-State before ending as snow.</p>
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<br /><a href="https://www.wlwt.com/article/an-icy-mess/38967576">Source link </a></p>
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		<title>Power outages, misery persist 9 days after Hurricane Ida</title>
		<link>https://cincylink.com/2021/09/09/power-outages-misery-persist-9-days-after-hurricane-ida/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 09 Sep 2021 04:39:31 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[Hundreds of thousands of homes and businesses in Louisiana, most of them outside New Orleans, still didn't have power Tuesday and more than half of the gas stations in two major cities were without fuel nine days after Hurricane Ida slammed into the state, splintering homes and toppling electric lines. There were also persistent signs &#8230;]]></description>
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					Hundreds of thousands of homes and businesses in Louisiana, most of them outside New Orleans, still didn't have power Tuesday and more than half of the gas stations in two major cities were without fuel nine days after Hurricane Ida slammed into the state, splintering homes and toppling electric lines. There were also persistent signs of recovery, however, as the total number of people without electricity has fallen from more than a million at its peak, while hundreds of thousands of people have had their water restored. AT&amp;T, which suffered widespread cellphone outages after the storm, reported that its wireless network now is operating normally in Louisiana.As residents struggled to recover, state organizations, church groups and volunteers labored for a ninth day to hand out food, water and other necessary supplies to those left without resources when their homes were destroyed or left uninhabitable. The disparity in power restoration between New Orleans, where nearly three-fourths of the city had electricity again, and other communities where almost all residents were still in the dark prompted frustration and finger-pointing.State Rep. Tanner Magee, the House's second-ranking Republican who lives in the devastated city of Houma in Terrebonne Parish, said he's convinced his region is being shortchanged in favor of New Orleans."It's very infuriating to me," Magee said. Though water was running again in his area, most hospitals in the region remained shuttered and the parish was in desperate need of temporary shelter for first responders and others vital to the rebuilding effort, he said. Warner Thomas, president and CEO of the state's largest hospital system — Ochsner Health — warned that it would be "some time" before hospitals in Terrebonne and Lafourche parish fully reopen. Emergency rooms at the two hospitals, however, were open.Carnival Cruise Line announced Tuesday that it will keep one of its ships, Carnival Glory, docked in New Orleans through Sept. 18 to serve as housing for first responders. Kim Bass said the Louisiana heat was the hardest thing to cope with without power at her home in St. John the Baptist Parish. She said she and her husband were using a generator to keep food refrigerated but had no air conditioning. Water service was intermittent. "So you may have water one minute, then you may not have water for the next two days," she said.Fuel shortages also persisted across hard-hit areas of the state. More than 50% of gas stations in New Orleans and Baton Rouge remained without gasoline Tuesday morning, according to GasBuddy.com.Magee said lines to get gasoline to power up generators and vehicles in his parish involve hourslong waits.The power situation has improved greatly since Ida first hit. In the first hours after the storm, nearly 1.1 million customers were in the dark — including all of New Orleans. With the help of tens of thousands of workers from power companies in numerous states, the state's biggest energy provider, Entergy, has been able to slowly bring electricity back, leaving only 19% of its customers in the region without power as of Tuesday. For residents in the state's four hardest-hit parishes in southeastern Louisiana, however, that number is little comfort. Fully 98% of those residents are still without power more than a week after Ida slammed onshore with 150 mph winds (240 kph) on Aug. 29. Power probably won't be widely restored to St. John the Baptist Parish until Sept. 17 and until Sept. 29 to Lafourche, St. Charles and Terrebonne parishes, Entergy said Monday. The parishes are home to about 300,000 people. In St. John the Baptist, power has been restored to "a small pocket" of customers in the hard-hit town of LaPlace, Entergy Louisiana President and CEO Phillip May said in a Tuesday conference call. He didn't say how many now have power there, but promised the number will rise as crews work their way into the community. A parade of utility trucks on Tuesday passed by a Veterans of Foreign Wars hall in LaPlace that serves as a clearinghouse for donated water, ice and other supplies still desperately needed in the area. One truck was in the parking lot of the hall working to restore electricity. In contrast, nearly all power has been restored in the capital of Baton Rouge, and only 27% of homes and businesses are still suffering outages in New Orleans. Entergy said it expected to have the vast majority of New Orleans brought online by Wednesday. Once areas such as New Orleans have their power restored, Entergy is moving its crews into communities south and west of the city that saw more widespread damage, May said.As Entergy worked to get the lights turned on everywhere, the Louisiana Department of Health reported that the number of people without water had fallen from a peak of 850,000 to 58,000, though about 850,000 people were being advised to boil their water for safety. And grocery stores reopened in some places. Ida's death toll in Louisiana rose to 15 people Tuesday after the state Department of Health reported two additional storm-related fatalities: a 68-year-old man who fell off of a roof while making repairs to damage caused by Hurricane Ida and a 71-year-old man who died of a lack of oxygen during an extended power outage. The storm's remnants also brought historic flooding, record rains and tornados from Virginia to Massachusetts, killing at least 50 more people.Seven nursing home residents in Louisiana died after being evacuated during Hurricane Ida to a warehouse in the town of Independence  where conditions were later determined to be unhealthy and unsafe, according to state health officials who said they've launched an investigation into the facility.In New Orleans, hundreds of seniors were evacuated from apartments after the electricity went out and some were trapped in wheelchairs on the top floors of their multi-story apartment complexes. The managers of some of the homes for seniors evacuated out of state without making sure the residents would be safe after the storm, New Orleans City Council member Kristin Palmer said Monday.
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					<strong class="dateline">NEW ORLEANS —</strong> 											</p>
<p>Hundreds of thousands of homes and businesses in Louisiana, most of them outside New Orleans, still didn't have power Tuesday and more than half of the gas stations in two major cities were without fuel nine days after Hurricane Ida slammed into the state, splintering homes and toppling electric lines. </p>
<p>There were also persistent signs of recovery, however, as the total number of people without electricity has fallen from more than a million at its peak, while hundreds of thousands of people have had their water restored. AT&amp;T, which suffered widespread cellphone outages after the storm, reported that its wireless network now is operating normally in Louisiana.</p>
<p>As residents struggled to recover, state organizations, church groups and volunteers labored for a ninth day to hand out food, water and other necessary supplies to those left without resources when their homes were destroyed or left uninhabitable. </p>
<p>The disparity in power restoration between New Orleans, where nearly three-fourths of the city had electricity again, and other communities where almost all residents were still in the dark prompted frustration and finger-pointing.</p>
<p>State Rep. Tanner Magee, the House's second-ranking Republican who lives in the devastated city of Houma in Terrebonne Parish, said he's convinced his region is being shortchanged in favor of New Orleans.</p>
<p>"It's very infuriating to me," Magee said. </p>
<p>Though water was running again in his area, most hospitals in the region remained shuttered and the parish was in desperate need of temporary shelter for first responders and others vital to the rebuilding effort, he said. </p>
<p>Warner Thomas, president and CEO of the state's largest hospital system — Ochsner Health — warned that it would be "some time" before hospitals in Terrebonne and Lafourche parish fully reopen. Emergency rooms at the two hospitals, however, were open.</p>
<p>Carnival Cruise Line announced Tuesday that it will keep one of its ships, Carnival Glory, docked in New Orleans through Sept. 18 to serve as housing for first responders. </p>
<p>Kim Bass said the Louisiana heat was the hardest thing to cope with without power at her home in St. John the Baptist Parish. She said she and her husband were using a generator to keep food refrigerated but had no air conditioning. Water service was intermittent. </p>
<p>"So you may have water one minute, then you may not have water for the next two days," she said.</p>
<p>Fuel shortages also persisted across hard-hit areas of the state. More than 50% of gas stations in New Orleans and Baton Rouge remained without gasoline Tuesday morning, according to GasBuddy.com.</p>
<p>Magee said lines to get gasoline to power up generators and vehicles in his parish involve hourslong waits.</p>
<p>The power situation has improved greatly since Ida first hit. In the first hours after the storm, nearly 1.1 million customers were in the dark — including all of New Orleans. With the help of tens of thousands of workers from power companies in numerous states, the state's biggest energy provider, Entergy, has been able to slowly bring electricity back, leaving only 19% of its customers in the region without power as of Tuesday. </p>
<p>For residents in the state's four hardest-hit parishes in southeastern Louisiana, however, that number is little comfort. Fully 98% of those residents are still without power more than a week after Ida slammed onshore with 150 mph winds (240 kph) on Aug. 29. </p>
<p>Power probably won't be widely restored to St. John the Baptist Parish until Sept. 17 and until Sept. 29 to Lafourche, St. Charles and Terrebonne parishes, Entergy said Monday. The parishes are home to about 300,000 people. </p>
<p>In St. John the Baptist, power has been restored to "a small pocket" of customers in the hard-hit town of LaPlace, Entergy Louisiana President and CEO Phillip May said in a Tuesday conference call. He didn't say how many now have power there, but promised the number will rise as crews work their way into the community. </p>
<p>A parade of utility trucks on Tuesday passed by a Veterans of Foreign Wars hall in LaPlace that serves as a clearinghouse for donated water, ice and other supplies still desperately needed in the area. One truck was in the parking lot of the hall working to restore electricity. </p>
<p>In contrast, nearly all power has been restored in the capital of Baton Rouge, and only 27% of homes and businesses are still suffering outages in New Orleans. Entergy said it expected to have the vast majority of New Orleans brought online by Wednesday. Once areas such as New Orleans have their power restored, Entergy is moving its crews into communities south and west of the city that saw more widespread damage, May said.</p>
<p>As Entergy worked to get the lights turned on everywhere, the Louisiana Department of Health reported that the number of people without water had fallen from a peak of 850,000 to 58,000, though about 850,000 people were being advised to boil their water for safety. And grocery stores reopened in some places. </p>
<p>Ida's death toll in Louisiana rose to 15 people Tuesday after the state Department of Health reported two additional storm-related fatalities: a 68-year-old man who fell off of a roof while making repairs to damage caused by Hurricane Ida and a 71-year-old man who died of a lack of oxygen during an extended power outage. The storm's remnants also brought historic flooding, record rains and tornados from Virginia to Massachusetts, killing at least 50 more people.</p>
<p>Seven nursing home residents in Louisiana died after being evacuated during Hurricane Ida to a warehouse in the town of Independence  where conditions were later determined to be unhealthy and unsafe, according to state health officials who said they've launched an investigation into the facility.</p>
<p>In New Orleans, hundreds of seniors were evacuated from apartments after the electricity went out and some were trapped in wheelchairs on the top floors of their multi-story apartment complexes. The managers of some of the homes for seniors evacuated out of state without making sure the residents would be safe after the storm, New Orleans City Council member Kristin Palmer said Monday.</p>
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