Community Corner

UPDATED: 900 Without Power in Smithtown, Most in Head of the Harbor

Outages begin as Nation Grid predicts 100,000 customers could lose power from the blizzard.

Update, 8:06 p.m. - More than 900 LIPA customers were without power Friday night as heavy snow and ice continued to fall on the region.

According to LIPA, 710 of those outages are in Head of the Harbor, 61 are in Nesconset, and 131 are in Smithtown, which earlier had more than 300 outages.

Original Story - Around 330 electric customers in Smithtown lost power Friday afternoon as a strong blizzard began to wallop the area.

Find out what's happening in Smithtownwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

According to the Long Island Power Authority's storm map, the outages were localized in Smithtown, while the other communities in the township so far had few or no reported outages.

National Grid President John Bruckner said Friday they expect about 100,000 power outages across Long Island from the storm, though outages are not expected to last more than 24 hours, he said.

Find out what's happening in Smithtownwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

LIPA put National Grid in charge of the storm response on Thursday – the first time it relinquished control in its history – after all-time lows in public faith in the utility due to its response the Hurricane Sandy in November.

Bruckner said the company has 700 high-voltage lineman and 250 tree-trimmers ready to act after the storm. In addition National Grid is upping the number of call-center personnel to provide better communication during and after the storm, Bruckner said.

National Grid has fully restocked its supplies of power lines, transformers and wires so that workers do not have to wait for shipments to come in, like they did during Superstorm Sandy.

“The resources we needed, we didn’t see until many days after Sandy. For this storm, they are on Long Island,” he said.

Bruckner also said that the company is monitoring the potential storm surge on Long Island’s North Shore, and has already sandbagged its equipment in case of flooding.

“We feel we’re in pretty good shape going into this storm,” Bruckner said.

The biggest concern for National Grid during the storm is not snow, but wind. Forecasters predict the New England nor'easter wind will range from 30 to 40 miles per hour with howling gusts hitting 60 miles per hour.

“This is not a typical storm. Usually, a storm comes in and out in an hour or two. This storm will last a couple days,” he said.

Bruckner said that National Grid will have 1,000 personnel on the ground early Saturday to assess the damage. Critical care customers including hospitals, nursing homes and sewage treatment plants will be attended to first. After that, areas with the most outages will be the focus, and lastly, the parts of the island with the least amount of outages.

Bruckner also said that National Grid has supplied generators to fuel terminals, so that gas shortages that happened during Superstorm Sandy do not repeat.

Amanda Lindner contributed to this report.


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