Community Corner

Thousands Still Without Power Monday

Around 3,000 Farmingdale homes are waiting for LIPA service.

After Hurricane Irene hit Farmingdale with 3.89 inches of rain and 61 mph winds this weekend, nearly 3,000 Farmingdale homes are without power Monday morning.

The LIPA Storm Center Outage map reports the following existing outages:

  • 1,060 out of 4,957 South Farmingdale homes are without power.
  • 632 out of 2,759 Village of Farmingdale homes are without power.
  • 936 out of 4,765 East Farmingdale homes are without power.

On Monday morning, a total of 419,538 LIPA customers still have now power. It's the Island's biggest power outage in 26 years.

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

LIPA predecessor, LILCO, dealt with 750,000 outages after Hurricane Gloria in 1985.

"Right now we are not estimating the power restoration time," company head Michael Hervey said at a Sunday afternoon news conference in Hicksville.

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

"We will be in damage assessment mode for the remainder of the afternoon into the evening and then picking up in the morning.

Hervey said the company would not give out an estimated restoration time until the initial damage estimate was complete.

"It's frustrating for customers, we realize that, we will try to get the estimate up as quickly as possible," he said.

Hervey said one of the key issues in restoring power is being able to get to substations on the South Shore and in the Rockaways that workers hadn't been able to reach on Sunday afternoon.

Although a lot of the damage assessment can only be done in daylight hours, Hervey promised that workers will be on the job throughout the night fixing problems that had already been identified. 

The company said there were outages reported throughout Long Island and that they were particularly concerned about areas along the Nassau-Suffolk border that had tornado watches posted.

National Grid's John Bruckner said there were already 1,000 workers dispatched out into the streets with another 300 expected to be dispatched by the end of Sunday. He was hoping to hire another 1,200 contractors by the end of the week.

The company also had hundreds of tree trimmers clearing the area around wires.

While there was no definitive time for power restoration, Hervey noted that "The history has been that we pick up a significant amount of customers in the first 24 to 36 hours and I expect that to be the case here."


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