But Conrad said they knew it was only a matter of getting power back from the provincial grid to light the community back up."There's not a single square inch of our service territory that has not been impacted adversely by this event," said Conrad.An estimated 110,000 people are still waiting for the lights to come back on, officials said at a Monday afternoon press conference. That number was about 75,000 as of 7 a.m. Tuesday.
All available employees and contractors have been working around the clock, said Joseph Muglia, the director of system operations and grid automation for Hydro Ottawa.They've been focused on restoring power to critical institutions such as hospitals and the water treatment plant, before pivoting to large neighbourhoods where they can get "the biggest bang for our buck," Muglia said on Sunday."This storm, however brief, was very destructive.
One of the many massive @HydroOne towers snapped in half near Hunt Club at 417. @hydroottawa working in collaboration with Hydro One to get power back pic.twitter.com/0dsez9pEFbThe huge transmission towers now bent as if they're "made out of paper" were part of the system that delivers power to Ottawa, she said, before being distributed by the local grid.
Baccega Rosa compared the repairs to building with Lego bricks, explaining that fixing a power outage isn't as simple as getting a hydro truck to your house."You need to lay the foundation," she said. "We need to repair the big lines first, in order to repair the secondary lines and then right down to the one you see on your street."
The scale of the damage has led some to suggest there must be a better way to do things, but Conrad said buried lines in Ottawa's Trend-Arlington were also wrecked by the tornado in 2018.
Ottawa Why can't the public comment on this story? We should be able to hold our politicians and hydro companies to account. cbcnocomment
New Rule Ontario: Don’t Vote for Assholes. VoteFordOutJune2 onpoli OntarioVotes
What’s going to happen when Trudeau’s mandate for everyone owning electric cars comes into play and this happens? Asking for a friend.
Shades of Montreal 1998.
I am beginning to think that 50% of my electric bill that hydroottawa calls 'delivery' is just going into somebody's pocket not to build the resiliency into the system we require for a stable grid and not look like some sort of 3rd world country. HydroNone is more like it.
'Who knew an occasional hamstring stretch would be so difficult, I can't get up! '
Time to pause and be thankful for the people at Hydro One and the local distribution companies that come out and work 7/24 after these disasters. Dangerous hard work often in the worst weather.
An hour of 120 km/h winds caused this much destruction? How lacking are the construction standards there?
gather dog sky
Come on now, admit it was the un-vaccinated that pushed them over.
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