Date: Fri 28-Aug-1998
Date: Fri 28-Aug-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: STEVEB
Quick Words:
weather-storm-power-outages
Full Text:
Storm Blacks Out Portions Of Newtown
BY STEVE BIGHAM
A fierce thunderstorm ripped through Newtown early Wednesday morning, knocking
out power to 2,223 customers.
The storm knocked down trees, including one in front of Newtown High School
that took down five sections of primary electrical wires. The mess caused some
problems Wednesday morning as teachers were forced to maneuver around the
downed wires as they arrived for work.
Sandy Hook appeared to be the hardest hit area, especially along Sherman
Street, where several trees fell to the ground.
For those awake at 12:30 am Wednesday morning, the storm was a spectacular
site with lightning bolts shooting across the sky and lighting up the
landscape.
According to Bill Stax of Connecticut Light & Power, Newtown appeared to be
the hardest hit town in the region. At 12:25 am, 81 customers lost power in
the Orchard Hill area and minutes later, 576 customers in the area of Toddy
Hill Road also lost power when a tree fell on the wires. At 6:24 am, 1,270
customers were affected by an outage in the area of Simm Lane. Another 296
customers were without power in the Gelding Hill Road area because of a tree
on wires.
"There weren't a lot of individual outages, but a lot of customers lost
service," said CL&P spokesperson Susan Marshall. Most of the power was
restored by 9 am Wednesday, she said.
Chris Wasserback of the Western Connecticut State University weather center
said the area was hit with more than two inches of rain and winds of up to 28
mph. The storm was not related to Hurricane Bonnie, which is much farther
south.
Firefighters began responding to calls of wires and trees down at 12:53 am on
Wednesday. Crews were dispatched to Birch Hill Road, Berkshire Road, Gelding
Hill, Sherman Street, Old Mill, Cherry Street, Brushy Hill Road, Rock Ridge
Road, Hanover Road, Sugar Street, Mt Nebo, Boggs Hill, and Phyllis Lane. There
also were a number of fire alarms erroneously set off by the storm.
Ms Marshall said many more potential power outages were prevented by the new
devices, called reclosures, that have been installed on many power lines.
"If a tree touches a wire it causes an interruption that causes your lights to
flicker," she explained. "Reclosures try to send power through the line again.
They try twice, which explains why your lights might flicker several times. If
there is still a problem, there will be an outage. But in a lot of other
cases, customers won't lose power."
At 10:30 am on Wednesday, the emergency dispatcher sent two fire companies and
the ambulance to Hanover Road after a caller said a woman and her child were
trapped in their car there by fallen wires. The passerby said she spotted the
victims in their car in an area between the monument and the railroad bridge,
then rushed to the General Store to call 911 for help. When the emergency
crews reached the scene, however, the car was gone. Broken cable wires dangled
from the poles.