AP/ November 10, 2012, 7:54 PM

Frustrated residents protest outside NY utility

More than 500 residents of Oceanside, L.I., showed up at a press conference to protest the performance of the Long Island Power Authority in repairing a system heavily damaged by superstorm Sandy. About 150,000 Long Island customers are still without power or heat nearly two weeks since the storm hit.

More than 500 residents of Oceanside, L.I., showed up at a press conference to protest the performance of the Long Island Power Authority in repairing a system heavily damaged by superstorm Sandy. About 150,000 Long Island customers are still without power or heat nearly two weeks since the storm hit. / WCBS

NEW YORK Even as the lights came for many who lost power in New York and New Jersey during the superstorm and a later nor'easter, hundreds of residents protested Saturday outside a Long Island utility, frustrated by its slow response to outages.

Power restoration has been slower there than in other areas hit by Superstorm Sandy, sparking criticism of the Long Island Power Authority. Some of the 130,000 blacked out homes and businesses the utility serves may not have power restored until the end of Tuesday, LIPA said.

In the rest of the region hardest hit by the storm, most service was expected to be restored by the end of the weekend, though that doesn't include tens of thousands of homes too damaged to juice up.

"We are sitting in a cold house. No one comes by," said John Mangin of Levittown, N.Y. "There should be criminal charges against the CEO and the executive board of LIPA for failure to do their jobs."

He was among about 300 people staging a rally in front of LIPA's office in Hicksville, N.Y. Not all were without power, but some who have power said they were there to protest LIPA's lack of communication.

LIPA chief operating officer Michael Hervey said they were aware customers haven't gotten the information they've needed from the utility, partly because of an outdated information technology system they're in the process of updating.

"I certainly feel the frustration of customers whose power remains out. Our hearts go out to them," Hervey said.

25 Photos

New Yorkers helping neighbors after Sandy

But he said workers are repairing unprecedented storm damage as fast as they can. About 6,400 linemen and 3,700 tree trimmers are at work, compared with 200 linemen on a normal day.

In Suffolk County, where about 28,000 remain without power, County Executive Steven Bellone announced he was cutting ties with LIPA and would deal directly with substation coordinators.

Hervey said he would not comment on that directly, but added that an ad hoc takeover of the system would lead to anarchy.

"The utility is the best suited to restore power and manage that," he said. "We can't have people step in and take over."

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo has called for investigation of the region's utilities, criticizing them as unprepared and badly managed. On Friday, two congressmen from Long Island called for the federal government to help LIPA restore electricity.

"It's a totally disorganized effort, and LIPA unfortunately seems to have lost control of the situation and that's why you see so many people becoming so angry," Rep. Peter King said Saturday.

In New York City and neighboring suburban Westchester County, utility Con Edison said it has restored electricity to 98 percent of homes and businesses. About 20,000 of the utility's customers remained powerless, down from a peak of more than 1 million.

In New Jersey, less than 85,000 customers were without power Saturday, most along the coast, utilities said. That was down from 2.7 million at the height of the storm. Most were expected to have power by the end of the weekend.

© 2012 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
17 Comments Add a Comment
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Boomvang1 says:
I live on the gulf coast and have gone through the same problems that you are having, several times. But when help is needed beggers can't be choosers. The people that are ******** in these city's should shut up and live with it. Help was offered but the unions made it difficult for the non union workers to help, so you know what let them stay without electricity.Thats goes to show you how smart some of these people are. Get rid of the union bosses that caused this.
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Lanche25 says:
Haha just another prime example of how socialism fails. We have Union members that are failing when private companies could have come in and been done. Lazy Union members and a failed socialist agenda. Woohoo and here comes Obamacare run by the DMV. Uh a heart attack, you will have to wait its lunchtime.
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lindajeanhall says:
Sorry, but I also read that utility companies from Georgia and other southern states, drove 20 hours to NY to help out and were given the boot because they were not union. Well, looks like you New Yorkers can live by your decisions. I think it was quite arrogant for you folks to have such an attitude towards decent people who came so far to help. So ....live by your decisions.
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BigMykul replies:
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Not given the boot, but held up until they agreed to a 31 page union pamplet. Some did, some didn't
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inbethlehem says:
Come on people! 60 million of us lost power during this devastating storm. The linemen have been doing a heroic job getting people back online.

Where I live, there's a big giant neon sign on the highway which simply says "Thanks PPL."

Just remember...somebody has to be last.
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outofwork2008 says:
If feel sorry for the people but I know what it is like to be without power for almost 2 weeks. And guess what it was underground power, the transformer in the underground fault blew up due to gopher damaging the cables. It took 2 weeks to bring back online because parts were not available.
But in NY and NJ they have another problem they have union shops so the work must be done by union workers. And if the parts are not available the utility companies must change out the whole system not just repair it!
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hypnotoad72 replies:
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Except the claim that Union crews were giving non-Union companies the boot was dispelled...

http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-201_162-57544237/ala-utilities-our-crews-not-turned-away-from-n.j/?tag=contentAux;mostShared
mark648 replies:
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HYPNOTOAD72- As usual CBS is not telling the truth when it doesn't promote the leftist agenda. Non union power crews we told the must pay union dues if they were to work. They declined the extortion.
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tiktin says:
The United States is becoming a third world country, and no amount of protest or demonstrations can change that.
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hypnotoad72 replies:
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You mean, somebody in position of authority must put their foot down?
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AllFlukedUp says:
Maybe Obama or Bloomie should have grown some nuts and told the NY union thugs not to chase away the non union volunteers who came to help.

Ya think?
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hypnotoad72 replies:
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And Christie...

Yes, we do think.

We also know that the non-union company that came to help was NOT TURNED AWAY, so kindly stop spreading lies. Seriously, shove it with the lying already.

I posted a link to somebody else above who was trying to re-promote the lie. For crying out loud, it is not 1938 any longer... (sorry for my not being subtle...)
mark648 replies:
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Tell me Hypnotoad if the non union crews were not turned away then where are they? Certainly not in the NYC area.
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natesc2011 says:
funny how when the "shoe is on the other foot" the gov't bears no responsibility. No I am not a republican.
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hypnotoad72 replies:
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We have the best government money can buy.

Maybe that's why worker pay has stagnated or dropped over the last few decades... and anyone can quickly find plenty of sources to corroborate that.
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