Lightning powers down the village
Around 6:30 a.m. on Tuesday, Aug. 5, the entire village’s electric
grid went dim, and then at 8:30 a.m. the village went dark. The howling
storms the night before had “fried” the closer, or giant
circuit breaker, on the DP&L substation on Snypp Road and shut down
most of the village and at least a mile of surrounding area for about
five hours, according to Village electric and water supervisor Kelly
Fox.
While DP&L assessed the problem and then rerouted the village’s
power to a temporary backup circuit until the substation could be repaired,
Village crew erected stop signs at intersections where electric traffic
signals were out, and Village police performed welfare checks on Friends
Care Community facilities and other individual residents whose health
needs required a generator for backup power.
Though power was only down until 1:20 p.m., many downtown businesses,
such as Tom’s Market, U.S. Bank, the Wind’s Cafe and the
post office were without registers and computers and chose to close
for part of the day. With food at imminent risk of spoiling, Tom’s
employees spread their leftover ice on the meat and dairy sections throughout
the store, and Current Cuisine assembled a large supply of sandwiches
for people desperate for a snack. Production facilities at YSI, Morris
Bean, Vernay and the Antioch Company sent first shift employees home
for the day.
The so-called “brown out” between 6:30 and 8:30 a.m., according
to Fox, was caused by the partially damaged recloser that had been struck
by lightning but still had one wire to carry part of the current, until
it too gave out. Power was completely restored by the afternoon, but
it was the longest period in many years that the village had gone without
power, Fox said.
“Mother Nature tends to come along and let us know she’s
still in charge,” he said.
Contact: lheaton@ysnews.com