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Edited on Fri Jan-28-11 05:15 PM by LiberalEsto
The power went off in our neighborhood 48 hours ago during our area's first major snowstorm of the winter. I'm in the Maryland suburbs of Washington DC.
It came down 2 to 3 inches an hour, dumping 10 inches of heavy wet snow. That morning we had light snow, followed by freezing rain. The roads were horrible. Biggest commuting mess ever - the federal Office of Personnel Management sent out notice of permission federal employees to leave early, but didn't stagger the departure times like they do every day to help prevent commuter gridlock.
There was utter gridlock. It took some people as long as 14 hours to get home. Trees were falling from the weight of the snow, pulling down power lines. When my husband rode home from work on Metro he found more than 200 people waiting as long as 45 minutes for buses that never came. About 90 buses got stuck in the snow. He walked to a local road and caught a bus, but it went 500 yards and got stuck. He started walking the 3 miles, stopping to help push stuck cars and help 8 other men lift a big tree that fell across the road. He finally got home to a dark, cold house but he was lucky - it only took him 3 hours.
The first night wasn't too bad, since the house stayed around 60 degrees, and we had two cuddly dogs in the bed. We used matches to light the gas stove. Dave stayed home Thursday to shovel out the driveway and help an elderly neighbor with his driveway.
Last night the inside temp dropped to 50. Our local utility, PEPCO, is rated one of the worst in the U.S. for outages and response, and it wasn't giving out any information except canned messages that most people would have power by 11 pm Friday. The local radio station was getting hundreds of angry calls about PEPCO, which was hours slower than other electric companies in the region to make snow plans and call in repair crews from nearby states. Local elected officials were raising hell with PEPCO too, because this was the third major outage in about the past year that they had messed up.
BUT the power came back around 1:30 this afternoon, as I was sitting in the car with the heat blasting so I could thaw out.
And half an hour ago it finally got warm enough to shower. So after walking around bundled up like an Inuit I have finally shed my grungy clothes and HOORAY I'M CLEAN!
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