Eastern power outages could last week

Peggy Bostic buys groceries at the Mick-or-Mack IGA grocery store, Monday, July 2, 2012, in New Castle, Va. / Jeanna Duerscherl,AP Photo/The Roanoke Times
(AP) WASHINGTON - From North Carolina to New Jersey, nearly 1.8 million people still without electricity were asking the same question Monday evening: Why will it take so long to get the lights back on?
Nearly three full days after a severe summer storm lashed the East Coast, utilities warned that many neighborhoods could remain in the dark for much of the week, if not beyond.
Friday's storm arrived with little warning and knocked out power to 3 million homes and businesses, so utility companies have had to wait days for extra crews traveling from as far away as Quebec and Oklahoma. And the toppled trees and power lines often entangled broken equipment in debris that must be removed before workers can even get started.
Adding to the urgency of the repairs are the sick and elderly, who are especially vulnerable without air conditioning in the sweltering triple-digit heat. Many sought refuge in hotels or basements.
Officials feared the death toll, already at 22, could climb because of the heat and widespread use of generators, which emit fumes that can be dangerous in enclosed spaces.
Storm-felled trees block Md. elderly from leaving their homes
Eastern storms leave 22 dead, 2M still in dark
Historic heat wave meets mass power outages
Mid-Atlantic power outages could last days
(At left, watch the CBS Evening News report on the fast-moving storm that caused all the damage.)
At the Springvale Terrace nursing home and senior center in Silver Spring, Md., generators were brought in to provide electricity, and air-conditioning units were installed in windows in large common rooms to offer respite from the heat and darkness.
Residents using walkers struggled to navigate doors that were supposed to open automatically. Nurses had to throw out spoiled food, sometimes over the loud objections of residents who insisted their melting ice cream was still good.
The lack of power completely upended many daily routines. Supermarkets struggled to keep groceries from going bad. People on perishable medication called pharmacies to see how long their medicine would keep. In Washington, officials set up collection sites for people to drop off rotting food. Others held weekend cookouts in an attempt to use their food while it lasted. And in West Virginia, National Guard troops handed out food and water and made door-to-door checks.
When it comes to getting the power running again, all utilities take a top-down approach that seeks to get the largest number of people back online as quickly as possible.
First, crews repair substations that send power to thousands of homes and businesses. Next, they fix distribution lines. Last are the transformers that can restore power to a few customers at a time.
In Great Falls, Va., just outside Washington, patent attorney Patrick Muir found out firsthand who was high on the priority list. The area is sparsely populated and wealthy, with mansions spread across secluded, wooded lots. Muir had been raiding water bottles from his powerless office to supply his home, which is on a well that was not working. His 8-year-old daughter spoke hopefully of a beach trip to escape the heat. Dad said it was under consideration.
"Great Falls always seems to be the first to go down and the last one to come back up," Muir said.
A Safeway supermarket trying to stay open with a limited power supply handed out free bags of dry ice. But after two days of temperatures in the 90s, the air inside was stale. Shopping carts with spoiled food, buzzing with flies, sat outside the store.
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Barack Obama should likewise set a good example and hire openly gay and lesbian people into positions of senior management in his campaign.
Obama receives major political and financial support from the LGBT community, but there is no one in his senior campaign structure who is openly gay.
There of course may be senior campaign officials who are privately gay or lesbian and that's their choice, but gays and lesbians must be seen to be counted and Barack Obama must reward his political constituencies with visible advancement. That means Obama must hire senior-level gays and lesbians who are comfortable with and proud of themselves just like Anderson Cooper. Good going, CNN and 60 Minutes. Even Mitt Romney hired an openly gay press spokesman, but he quit.
Would someone please copy and paste this onto the Anderson Cooper thread? I haven't been able to see that thread from my computer since yesterday afternoon, and obviously there's no box that permits additional posts to it that appears on my screen.
Western Washington has drawn the short straw all right, but at least the storms that do come in aren't going to rip out your favorite spruce or cedar by the roots. 30+ is about the most you're going to see and that's gusts.
I don't live all that far off and even where I am the gloom and drip we've seen in June would make a New Hebridies sheep farmer weep with sympathy. It's rough going.
There is (sort of) good news on the horizon. A temporary drying trend of 4 to 7 days will kick in starting around the 5th. After that, we're back in the slop but I, for one, an grateful for the reprieve...