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From ‘weirdest night’ to ‘a sight to see’
Anthony Grundy (right), 7, plays with his sister Maurionna Grundy, 5, and cousin Darlene James, 2, at the Asbury United Methodist Church gym, which was put into service as a Red Cross shelter this week. JAMES GIBBARD / Tulsa World
By MICHAEL OVERALL World Staff Writer
Published:
12/16/2007 12:36 AM
Last Modified: 8/20/2008 7:27 AM
Editor’s note: Last week was one of the most challenging periods in the history of Tulsa. Tulsa World writer Michael Overall recorded this chronology of how some Tulsans dealt with the ice storm of 2007.
The patient was in cardiac arrest when the ambulance arrived, and the EMTs had to use a defibrillator to shock his heart back to life.
“It was the first exciting call of the night,” remembers Jimmy Mood, the driver.
As the ambulance rushed toward the hospital last Sunday, the rain was just beginning to freeze against the windshield. The streets were just beginning to grow slick. And the tree branches were just beginning to sag.
“It was a pretty normal night,” Moody says. “We had no idea what was about to happen.”
Nobody did.
One forecast for last Sunday night was “a little rain early, then a bit of ice.”
A bit.
‘Weirdest night’: Somehow, Nathan Mars managed to stay asleep until 4 a.m., when the phone rang. His girlfriend wanted to know if they would have classes Monday at Jenks High School, where Mars is a senior.
“I don’t think so,” he decided, looking out the window.
Mars lives near 101st Street and Yale Avenue, but the scene would’ve looked the same almost anywhere in Tulsa. Trees bent over in the middle. Broken branches littered the rooftops and blocked the roads. Eerie green flashes lit up the sky as the power lines snapped.
Like thousands of other people across Tulsa and northeastern Oklahoma, Mars lay awake the rest of the night, listening to
the trees come crashing down like thunder.
“It was the weirdest night ever.”
‘A big one’:
By the time Mars and his girlfriend hung up the phones, Rod Carter was already on his way to Tulsa from Broken Bow, where he’s an engineer for American Electric Power-Public Service Company of Oklahoma.
About 200 miles south of Tulsa, he was comfortable in a short-sleeve shirt when he left home at 3 a.m. Monday. As he drove, he knew hundreds of other utility workers were already starting to converge on the area, too—some from as far away as Georgia.
“They told me to pack enough clothes for 10 days,” Carter says. “It was going to be a big one.”
‘Started to sink in’:
Teil Blackshare had been awake for much of the night, too. But he didn’t realize how serious the damage was until he was driving to work Monday morning at Asbury United Methodist Church, where he’s the managing director of ministries.
“I knew my own neighborhood was a war zone, but I didn’t know everybody else’s neighborhood was the same,” Blackshare says. “It started to sink in just how bad it was.”
Nearly a quarter of a million homes and businesses sat in the dark across the Tulsa area, with hundreds of thousands of people left without heat. By lunchtime Monday, Blackshare had a team of volunteers collecting supplies. By 3 p.m., Asbury had opened its doors as a Red Cross shelter. And by nightfall, dozens of people were sleeping on the gymnasium floor and spilling into Sunday school classrooms.
‘One after the other’:
Tree branches continued to fall through the night Monday and well into Tuesday, reblocking streets that had already been cleared more than once. Neighborhoods became obstacle courses.
“We’d have to stop, turn around and circle back,” says Mood, the ambulance driver. Occasionally, fire crews literally had to saw their way through debris.
By Tuesday afternoon, the 911 calls still hadn’t slowed down, but the type of emergency was changing. In the immediate aftermath of the ice storm, Mood and the other EMTs were scrambling between car accidents and chain saw mishaps.
Now they began to see asphyxiations from gas heaters, stovetop burners and gasoline- powered generators.
Back-up batteries were running down on breathing machines and kidney dialysis equipment.
“It was all just a blur,” Mood says. “We’d drop one patient off at the hospital and already have another call—one after the other, no pause in between.”
‘The worst part’:
By midweek, the stress was obviously getting to people, making nerves as brittle as tree limbs. Famous for their good manners on the road, Oklahomans started blaring their car horns like New Yorkers.
“My husband and me are snapping at each other,” reports Daniella Dulles. The first couple of nights, huddled under blankets and playing cards by candlelight on the floor of their living room, Dulles almost had fun.
“It got old fast.”
By the third night, with not a single light to be seen in their north Tulsa neighborhood, she was packing a suitcase to stay with relatives in Dallas.
“I’m going to give it a couple more days because I can’t miss work,” she says. With trees down in the yard and the electrical box ripped off the house, Dulles and thousands of other Tulsans face expensive repairs.
“The worst part is how to pay for all this.”
‘So tired’:
In such a darkened city, even the most subtle light bulbs stood out like flashing neon. The glimpse of a living room lamp could spark jealousy. Christmas decorations seemed like taunts.
And porch lights became beacons, guiding friends and relatives to warm, safe havens.
By late in the week, extralong extension cords began to crisscross neighborhoods, stretching across streets and alleys to share what little electricity there was.
One of the lucky few who never lost power in east Tulsa’s Sungate area, Laura Simms opened her own kind of emergency shelter. More than 20 friends, relatives and neighbors moved in, filling the house with blankets and bedrolls, turning every room — even the formal dining area — into makeshift barracks.
Feeding them became a fulltime job for Simms.
“Nobody’s stepping on any toes. Everybody seems really thankful, so I can’t say it’s a burden.”
During daylight hours, Simms’ son — the quarterback of Memorial High School’s football team — got several other players together and roamed the neighborhood to clear debris from the streets and yards.
“We work all day,” Tyler Simms says. “So when we get home, we’re so tired we go straight to sleep.”
‘Pulling together’:
Mars had been right about what he told his girlfriend on the night of the ice storm — school was out. But running his own lawncare business at the age of 18, Mars stayed busy from sun up to sun down clearing debris and trimming branches. Every few hours, he’d put down the chain saw and go back home to check on an 80- something-year-old neighbor, whose husband died just a few weeks ago.
“She’s kind of small and fragile,” Mars says. Using some of the cash he earned cutting trees, he bought a generator and hooked it up to give the widow some lights and a little heat.
“It wasn’t a big deal,” Mars shrugs, suggesting that thousands upon thousands of Oklahomans have offered kind gestures to each other in the last few days. “I think everybody’s pulling together and doing what they can.”
‘People are dancing’:
A convoy of more than 200 utility trucks rumbled into Broken Arrow, with the police blocking all the intersections for several miles Thursday afternoon while inconvenienced drivers climbed out of their cars — not to curse, but to cheer and clap.
“It was a sight to see,” says Carter, the AEP-PSO engineer from Broken Bow. “It was like an army coming to liberate the town.”
Crews worked from first light to 9 or 10 o’clock at night, grabbing a snack to eat whenever and wherever they could. By noon Friday, Carter was standing under a light pole near the Broken Arrow Justice Center, where another crewman climbed into a cherry picker to reach three giant breaker-switches. With the flash of a blue-green spark, another 250 homes got their power back.
“People are dancing in their living rooms right now,” Carter smiles. Back at Expo Square, officials announce that the number of customers without power has dropped below 100,000.
‘Don’t know’:
After a couple of days off to take care of the damage at his own house, Mood climbed back behind the wheel of an ambulance Saturday afternoon — just in time for a snowstorm.
After one of the most stressful and expensive weeks in Tulsa history, Mood and the rest of the city are bracing for whatever comes next. “I don’t know what’s going to happen,” Mood says. Nobody does.
Michael Overall 581-8383
michael.overall@tulsaworld.com
By MICHAEL OVERALL World Staff Writer
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Cathy
, Tulsa (12/16/2007 8:07:24 AM)
Really outstanding article describing the chain of events. I've e-mailed it to friends and family as an accurate assessment of what happened. Nice job, Michael Overall, and kudos to Nathan Mars for helping his elderly neighbor in such a thoughtful and generous way. Nathan, you are my hero (one of many throughout this ordeal!
Report Comment
I agree with Cathy
, Tulsa (12/16/2007 8:29:12 AM)
This just proves “Not all young people are bad"; Thanks Nathan, to you and to all the rest who have sacrificed to help their neighbors.
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irritated
, tulsa (12/16/2007 9:37:54 AM)
So dramatic. Good Lord. yes, it sucked. But people go through much worse than this. Makes Tulsa look like a bunch of whiners.
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David
, Tulsa (12/16/2007 11:58:21 AM)
To #3: You're right, people do go through much worse than this. Out of curiosity, how long was your home without power? How many young children are there in your home who needed a warm place to stay? How much food did you have to throw out? How many days of work were you forced to miss due to the outage? Were you able to bathe, unlike so many of your fellow Tulsans. Did you donate any time, money, food or blankets to the recovery effort or did you just sit on your condescending butt and enjoy a couple of days off from work?
Report Comment
Just another Medic
, (12/16/2007 1:24:13 PM)
Yeah - even as a medic I hve to say -we have worked our fannies off, and what's left has been chewed off by irate, tired ER nurses and docs. "Why are you bringing another one in? Don't you know we are on divert?" Everyone is sick of it, we are all tired, and those of us running inside and out again are cold, wet, and catching whatever crap is going around, but we should all remember what we are here for, and help one another. Nathan is a better example for young people than most of us who are supposed to be the adults sitting the examples. Thanks for the reminder, Nathan. You are a fine man. Stay the way you are!
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Scooter McHenry
, (12/16/2007 3:38:30 PM)
Is it me or does the thought of four families living in a single-family home bring about thoughts of illegal immigrants?
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sad state of affairs
, tulsa (12/16/2007 6:00:23 PM)
Only six comments about a good story before one racist space cadet ruined it. He probably voted for the river tax too.
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Cliff
, Tulsa (12/16/2007 9:54:41 PM)
David #4 Whats with the 20 questions. Can I answer all of them? Nope, don't have that much time.
SHUT UP !!!!
Report Comment
Sid
, (12/16/2007 10:37:06 PM)
"Famous for their good manners on the road"..?? What idiot typed this and what planet has he been on? Been at a stop sign lately?
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Tammy
, North Tulsa (12/17/2007 3:17:45 AM)
I love how this is written. =D
Even though its about an aweful situation, lol.
The first night was unbearable. I couldn't want to fall asleep, even though I still had to work early the next morning. Afraid to wake up to a loud crash of frozen tree branches in my bedroom, during the midst of all that icy silence.. Gave me chills down the spine every time I heard a tree getting ripped apart.
Also gave us a reason to get out there and help others in our community. Which is usually unseen, or just not happening at all.
Crappy way to end the year, but maybe it will open our minds; keeps hearts giving; and regain a better unity long after we ring in the new year.
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#3
, Tulsa (12/17/2007 9:49:46 AM)
To answer your questions:
To #3: You're right, people do go through much worse than this.
Out of curiosity, how long was your home without power? That would be 2 days.
How many young children are there in your home who needed a warm place to stay? I have 2 children and we were plenty warm as we used BLANKETS.
How much food did you have to throw out? None. We were kinda smart and used coolers. How many days of work were you forced to miss due to the outage? We own a business and unlike some people that got PAID for the days off, we were out of business for a week. Were you able to bathe, unlike so many of your fellow Tulsans. Yes, we have a gas stove and heated water that way and the water wasn't turned off, so it wasn't all that hard. Did you donate any time, money, food or blankets to the recovery effort or did you just sit on your condescending butt and enjoy a couple of days off from work? Like I said, we own a business. We helped several clients out with their needs. I'm sorry...now what did YOU do for Tulsa?
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PC
, Tulsa (12/17/2007 10:19:25 AM)
#11 (irritated). How nasty and an mean spirited can you be? I see the whole "good will toward your fellow man" concept has escaped you. Boohoo, you went without power for 2 days. Others went much longer than you and some are still without power. Sometimes, huddling under blankets just doesn't cut it. How fantastic for you that you were able to store all your food in coolers. That just makes you better than the rest of it. Tell me, how is the weather on your lily pad? You're the type of person that gives Tulsa the perception of being a "bunch of whiners." I'm also assuming you’re the type of person who was laying on your horn at the downed stop lights. Too much to ask for you to wait your turn. Your time is more important than the rest of us. And tell me, how did you lose a week’s worth of work? For someone who owns their own business and only lost power for 2 days, common sense would say that you would have been able to do a little work from home. But then again, I guess I understand because that would have meant you had to get down off your soap box and that was probably a little too much to ask of you. Before you start spouting off at the mouth about how it is all “so dramatic” remove your nose from the air and look around. For some, it was dramatic.
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Sara
, Tulsa (12/17/2007 12:18:05 PM)
To # 4 and # 12.. Which are the same person.
Get off that speed, it is making you too hyper.
Also, shut your ignorant, stupid mouth !!
Report Comment
David
, (12/17/2007 12:58:02 PM)
Sorry, Sara. Not the same person. I posted #4. I am curious as to why you find it ignorant to mention the concerns that some of our fellow Tulsans are still facing. Perhaps if you were to watch the local (or national) news instead of Springer reruns you would be able to grasp the severity of the situation. Until then, work on your punctuation and sentence structure and have a Merry Christmas!
Report Comment
Sara
, Tulsa (12/17/2007 8:02:26 PM)
# 14. David???? HUMMMMM
Anyone that would get on here and rattle off all of those stupid questions the way you do on every article in the paper, using half a dozen differant names, if not more, has got to have a mental problem.
Anyone can tell that it is the same person, just by the way you express yourself.
Plus, you always try to act like you know everything.
I find it strange that you are the only person that seems to have all the answers.
Why don't you take your own advice, and work on your own punctuation and sentence structure, because you certainly need to, or, are you too stupid and ignorant to even do that? Answer, YES !!!!
Report Comment
Sara
, Tulsa (12/17/2007 8:10:34 PM)
# 14.. So Called David ??????
One other thing, quit using the word "ASSUME" all of the time. That is a dead giveaway.
Report Comment
PC
, Tulsa (12/18/2007 9:32:05 AM)
Poor, poor Sara. I know it is hard to believe but more than one person agrees that you are kind of a twit. I ASSUME you spend a great deal of time reading conspiracy theories and watching shows on UFOs and Bigfoot. Tsk, tsk. Now (and I know you're not going to be able to stand it, but here it is anyway) my question to you: Do you think that every comment on every article that poses a question on the tired rantings of middle-aged old prunes--such as yourself--is the same person? Also, what is your definition of "ignorant"? I'm not sure if you actually know what it means.
Report Comment
David
, Tulsa (12/18/2007 9:23:41 PM)
Gee whiz, Sara! Have you ever considered switching to decaf? Also, when you type your message in the comment box and words are underlined in red that means that you misspelled the underlined word. If you are going to be made irrationally angry by every differing opinion that you encounter, (that would be differant in Sara-speak), at least try to spell your rebuttal correctly.
Report Comment
David
, Tulsa (12/18/2007 9:25:48 PM)
And to PC from Tulsa, I am buying you a virtual cup of coffee. Happy Holidays to you and yours!
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