For immediate
release
Contact: Jim McCarty
(573) 659-3402
(573) 680-2451
Feb. 12, 2008 — 11:15 a.m.
Co-ops work together to restore power
A dozen electric cooperatives across southern Missouri are once again
restoring power in the wake of a winter storm that dumped heavy ice on their
lines and caused about 29,000 members to lose power. The Association of
Missouri Electric Cooperatives again enacted its Emergency Assistance
Program to send assistance to the three electric cooperatives hit the
hardest.
Through the program that finds help from systems out of harm’s way,
16 linemen and eight trucks were sent to Ozark Border Electric, Poplar
Bluff, and Webster Electric, Marshfield. Eight linemen and four additional
trucks were dispatched to Se-Ma-No Electric in Mansfield.
The fresh crews were sent by Co-Mo Electric, Tipton; Three Rivers
Electric, Linn; Crawford Electric, Bourbon; Laclede Electric, Lebanon;
Gascosage Electric, Dixon; Pemiscot-Dunklin Electric, Hayti; Sac-Osage
Electric, El Dorado Springs; and Central Missouri Electric, Sedalia.
All other systems reporting trouble have been able to keep up with
the restoration efforts with their own crews and outside contractors.
“It’s mostly trees in the wires and lines coming down from the
weight of the ice,” says Rob Land, who coordinates the relief effort for the
Jefferson City-based association. “The good news is we haven’t lost many
poles.”
Systems in the storm’s path reported 1/2 inch to 1 inch of ice,
with more on the way as weather conditions deteriorated throughout the day
on Monday, Feb. 11. Systems affected and their outage numbers are as
follows:
- Ozark Border, Poplar Bluff: 2,500
- Webster, Marshfield: 3,000
- Se-Ma-No, Mansfield: 550
- White River Valley, Branson: 1,100
- Ozark Electric, Mount Vernon: 800
- Laclede Electric, Lebanon: Restoration complete
- Intercounty Electric, Licking: 700
- Howell-Oregon, West Plains: 1,550
- Southwest Electric, Bolivar: Restoration complete
- Black River, Ferdericktown: 8,500
- Citizens, Ste. Genevieve: 3,200
- SEMO, Sikeston: 4,500
At Webster Electric, about 4,500 members were without power at the
height of the problem. Webster’s crews just completed mopping up from
tornado damage in January. They again worked through the night and restored
service to 1,500. Contractors are also assisting the restoration effort.
In southeast Missouri, Jerry Dockins at SEMO Electric, Sikeston, reported
trees were “dropping like flies.” As the trees fall, they are taking power
lines with them causing outage numbers to increase in the northern Bootheel.
Transmission problems caused extensive outages at Black River Electric,
which had 11,000 members without power at one point. Two transmission line
outages at Ozark Border in Poplar Bluff also caused extensive outages. With
the transmission situation taken care of, Ozark Border’s problems stemmed
from thousands of widely spaced individual outages that will take time to
repair.
“Some we get back on go right back off,” says Stanley Estes, Ozark
Border manager. “We need a break in the weather. It’s 28 degrees. For us to
make progress the ice needs to melt and it looks like it’s not going to.”
Still, Estes and other cooperative managers expected to have most of the
outages restored by afternoon or evening on Wednesday, Feb. 13.
Elsewhere, the storm caused damage to electric cooperative lines
from Branson all the way to the Fredericktown and Ste. Genevieve areas. It
spared the Bootheel, allowing crews from Pemiscot-Dunklin Electric to assist
their neighbors.
Some co-ops, including Southwest Electric in Bolivar where outages
numbered in the hundreds, were able to complete restoration efforts by
Tuesday morning. Intercounty Electric in Licking expected to be finished
later Tuesday. “We may not see everyone back on today but the vast majority
will be back on,” Land says.
Those electric cooperatives affected by the storm ask their members
for patience as they work to safely restore power.
For more
information, contact Jim McCarty at the Association of Missouri
Electric Cooperatives — (573)
635-6857, ext. 3402, jmccarty@amec.org.
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