Cutting the losses
BY BRIAN BARBER World Staff Writer
Thursday, December 20, 2007
12/07/12 at 11:18 AM
Workers head home as focus shifts to meters
Out-of-state power crews began
leaving Tulsa on Wednesday as the
power outage number dropped to
1,000 in the metro area.
Another 10,000 customers in Tulsa are suspected to have meter
weatherhead damage and can't have
their service restored until repairs
are made by an electrician.
"We have plenty of resources to
address what's left," said Preston
Kissman, American Electric Power-Public Service Company of Oklahoma vice president of distribution.
The storm, which caused 246,000
outages at peak, has cost the company "certainly millions of dollars per
day" in extra manpower, AEP-PSO
spokesman Stan Whiteford said,
adding that estimates have not yet
been compiled.
It has not been decided whether a
rate increase will be necessary to
help pay for the extra expenses, he
said.
"That decision likely won't be
made for some time, and, if that is
the route that is taken, it would have
to go through the Oklahoma Corporation Commission," Whiteford said.
Mayor Kathy Taylor met with
thousands of line workers and tree
cutters for breakfast Wednesday at
the Tulsa County fairgrounds staging area before many were released.
Taylor presented each of the utility workers with a flier featuring a
collage of newspaper clippings highlighting their restoration efforts.
By Thursday, their ranks should
be down to several hundred who will
stay on through Monday, Kissman
said.
Operation Power Up!: AEP-PSO
is working closely with the city
through Operation Power Up! to
identify damaged meter weatherheads and schedule them for repair.
For those with weatherhead
problems, licensed electricians must make repairs before the company can return
service.
Taylor has said she wants
power restored to everyone by
Christmas.
The city launched a public
assistance program this week
to help residents who can't afford the necessary meter repairs.
A hot line -- (866) 789-8898
-- that was set up for the program had 2,400 calls Tuesday,
which was its first day of operation, and an additional 2,200
Wednesday. The line is answered from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Other outage numbers: Oklahoma Gas & Electric Co. is
still reporting 9,393 outages,
with the vast majority in the
Oklahoma City metropolitan
area.
The Oklahoma Association
of Rural Cooperatives is reporting slightly more than
3,000 customers still without power, mostly from Verdigris
Valley Electric Cooperative,
which is based in Collinsville.
Clearing streets: Tulsa's
street crews are wrapping up
efforts to clear city streets of
tree debris.
Now they are faced with developing a plan to collect all of
the broken limbs that line people's curbsides, said Dan
Crossland, the Public Works
Department's deputy director
of public facilities.
City officials hope to be able
to hire a national disaster debris removal firm with the financial assistance expected from the president's disaster
declaration.
"By ourselves, it would take
months to accomplish," Crossland said. "What we are asking
is that people not throw tree
limbs into the streets to try to
get us to pick them up faster.
That will only slow us down."
The American Red Cross
closed its last shelter Wednesday. In response to the blackout, the organization had
opened 34 shelters, where
1,800 people registered to
spend the night.
Fire fatalities: The number
of deaths statewide attributed to the ice storm reached 28
Wednesday, when Sharon
Corbitt, a lawyer, died in a
hospital from injuries she suffered in a fire last week.
Corbitt's husband, James C.
Lang, also a lawyer, died in the
blaze that spread from their
house's fireplace.
In Broken Arrow, fire officials identified on Wednesday
a man whose body was found
inside his burning home Dec.
13 as Tim Holman, 51.
Holman, a retired IRS agent,
had multiple sclerosis and
lived alone in the home in the
2300 block of West Commercial Court. His death was ruled
accidental due to an alternative heating source because
the house was without power,
firefighters said.
Other weather-related fire
victims include Ralph Ward,
68, who died Dec. 12 in a fire
at the Saddle Brook Apartments, 1400 E. 62nd Place;
and Susie Robinson, who died
Dec. 14 after being found in a
burning house near 49th
Street and Boston Avenue.
Authorities have yet to release the name of a woman
who died Dec. 10 from smoke
inhalation in a house fire near
800 S. Trenton Ave.
Brian Barber 581-8322
brian.barber@tulsaworld.com
Associated Images:

Tulsa firefighters Eddie Mangold (left) and Derek Dixon chat with Tulsa resident Edna Tibbits at her home near Oklahoma Street and RockfordAvenue on Wednesday.

Tulsa firefighters Eddie Mangold (left) and Derek Dixon chat with Tulsa resident Edna Tibbits at her home near Oklahoma Street and RockfordAvenue on Wednesday.

A Code Red Underground crew works on Cox Communication cable lines along 56th Street North near Hartford Avenue.Jesse Verardo, shown in the bucket, later said: ‘‘These boys are working hard. God bless every one of them.’’

AEP lineman Andy Garcia of Pharr, Texas, connects apower line Wednesday night at a house near 54th StreetNorth and Hartford Avenue.
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