• Print
  • Send to a friend
  • Comment (2)
  •  

Power back on, except for 19 homes

Maritime Electric proved this picture which should shed some light on the cause of the power outage this afternoon in eastern P.E.I. Submitted photo

Maritime Electric proved this picture which should shed some light on the cause of the power outage this afternoon in eastern P.E.I.

Published on January 31, 2013
Published on January 31, 2013
Dave Stewart  RSS Feed
Topics :
Maritime Electric , Eastern P.E.I.

A large section of eastern P.E.I. lost power around 1 p.m. on Thursday when high winds caused havoc with trees on the power lines.

A crew found trees on the Baldwin Road down on lines and were patrolling for other problems.

Approximately 6,000 customers were down for about 90 minutes from Vernon River to Wood Islands and up to Montague. The Victoria Cross and Dover substations were the ones affected.

Those same customers then lost power again around 3 p.m. Crews had found a broken piece of equipment on the Heatherdale Road.

Power had been restored to over half of those customers — those in Eldon, Belfast, Montague, Vernon River, Caledonia, Sturgeon and surrounding areas — just before 4 p.m.

At 4:22 p.m., Maritime Electric reported the utility needed another piece of equipment in Roseneath to complete the repair on the Heatherdale Road to fix the problem and that it would take another 90 minutes.

At 4:52 p.m., Maritime Electric said it had another outage, this one in the St. Eleanors area, affecting approximately 600 customers. The 2,200 customers in the Dover/Panmure/Murray Harbour areas were still in thedark although power was restored there minutes later.

As of 10:30 Maritime Electric said there are about 19  customers without power, scattered individual areas in Rustico, St Margarets, Summerside, Augustine Cove, Stanley Bridge, and Canoe Cove.

St Eleanors/Sherbrooke power had been restored.

 

Comments

  • Username
    Not Hard to Tell
    - January 31, 2013 at 17:50:21

    Not hard to tell you haven't planted trees to get some privacy from the highway . I had mine buchered this fall , not from Maritime Electric who trimmed the tops only for a new line , but later without my knowledge by East Link to run their damm cable which I don't even use . They certaintly cut inside my line & now my road frontage looks like h*** . Where has common sense & my rights gone . East link is a private company & had no right to bucher my trees that took years to grow . There isn't any reason for running cable lines overhead so low . They should be forced to bury them like a lot of the telephone lines are .

    Submit a comment

  • Username
    redman
    - January 31, 2013 at 15:26:37

    Everywhere you look there are trees just waiting to be blown onto the lines, don't just trim, they should be cut down if they are within reach of the power lines

    Submit a comment

Submit a comment

Submit a comment (we keep all emails private)
Agreement

We ask that users remain courteous. You may not post insulting, discriminatory or inappropriate content, which may be removed at our discretion. We are not responsible for user content and opinions. Use of this site as well as content submission & ownership are governed by our Conditions of Use and Privacy Policy.

Member organizations should be non-profit in nature, and promote legal activities. Any organization found promoting illegal activities or commercial products or services will be deleted from the site.

I agree with these conditions.

Advertising

Newsletter

Please enter your email to receive our free newsletter

Subscribe to news alerts
loading...

Expert bloggers

Ride for Heart
Blogger
Heart and Stroke Foundation
Let's go ride a bike
[Sponsored]

More bloggers here

The Guardian Twitter

Advertising