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WSWS : News
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US: Millions still without power a week after Hurricane Isabel
By Patrick Martin
25 September 2003
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The devastation left behind by Hurricane Isabel, which struck
the mid-Atlantic United States on September 18-19, raises new
questions about the decay of the US infrastructure, particularly
the electrical power system whose critical weaknesses were already
exposed in the blackout that hit eight states in the Northeast
and Midwest a month ago.
The hurricane came ashore in North Carolina on the afternoon
of Thursday, September 18, moving on a northwesterly track which
brought the eye of the storm over central Virginia and then about
60 miles west of the Washington DC metropolitan area. By Friday,
seven state governments had declared states of emergency: North
Carolina, Virginia, Maryland, West Virginia, Pennsylvania, Delaware
and New Jersey, as well as the District of Columbia.
As many as 40 people died in storm-related incidents, some
drowned by rising flood waters, others hit by flying objects propelled
by winds of up to 100 miles per hour, others falling victim to
carbon monoxide poisoning from unventilated emergency generators
or electrocuted by downed power lines. Three power company linemen
were killed working to restore electricity, two in Maryland and
one in North Carolina.
More than 15 million people lost electricity services in North
Carolina, Virginia, Maryland and the District of Columbia, the
area hardest hit, and 3 million were still without power Wednesday,
September 24, a full week after the storm. The two biggest utilities,
Dominion Electric in Virginia and Potomac Electric Power (Pepco)
in the Washington DC area, said that some customers would not
have their power restored until two weeks after the storm.
Dominion Electric had nearly half a million customersclose
to 2 million peoplewithout power, mainly in the Norfolk
and Richmond metropolitan areas. Another 250,000 customers of
Pepco and Baltimore Gas & Electric, nearly 1 million people,
were without power in Maryland and Washington DC.
Several hundred school buildings were without power in Washington
and its Maryland and Virginia suburbs, about one-sixth of the
total, forcing class cancellations for tens of thousands of school
children. A second rainstorm on Tuesday, September 22 forced many
schools that had reopened to shut down because of renewed outages
and flooding.
The storm had a dramatic impact on many regional landmarks:
it shut down the Chesapeake Bay Bridge, the first time the bridge
was closed by weather in its 51-year-history; the Midtown Tunnel
between Norfolk and Portsmouth, Virginia was closed by flooding;
a storm-weakened overhead road sign began to give way and forced
a four-hour closing of the Woodrow Wilson Bridge, on the Washington
Beltway; a huge sinkhole, four stories deep and 110 feet long,
forced the closing of Interstate 70 near Frederick, Maryland,
as well as an adjacent commuter rail line; Alexandria, Virginias
historic Old Town area was under 10 feet of water; flooding at
the Tidal Basin, near the Jefferson and Lincoln memorials, brought
traffic on Interstate 95 to a halt.
High winds did the most damage to the electrical system, toppling
thousands of trees, cutting thousands of power lines and shutting
down 1,150 out of 1,600 primary distribution circuits in Virginia.
Rain water did nearly as much damage. Thousands of homes were
inundated by the storm surge along the coastline and many more
were flooded in low-lying areas inland.
A representative of the Insurance Information Institute estimated
the total cost of Hurricane Isabel as $5 billion, half of it damage
to businesses and public infrastructure, half of it damage to
homes. Because of changes in insurance coverage in the aftermath
of the devastating financial losses caused by Hurricane Andrew
in 1992, as well as smaller storms over the past decade, only
20 percent of damage will be covered. The bulk of the repair cost
will come out of the pockets of homeowners and small businessmen,
driving many weaker companies into bankruptcy.
The impact of the storm on the electrical system was far more
severe than expected in the hours before Isabel arrived. The power
distribution lines, in particular, proved to be extremely vulnerable
to what was, in the final analysis, a comparatively modest weather
event. Isabels force diminished considerably before it made
landfall. It dropped from a category 5 storm, the most powerful,
to category 2 as it traveled through the Atlantic Ocean towards
the continental US.
A major factor appears to be the reduction in maintenance spending
by the electric utilities, particularly on the distribution systemthe
same problem highlighted by the August 14-15 blackout, which began
in Ohio and Michigan and spread through Ontario and into New York
state. In the case of Dominion Power, the companys maintenance
spending on overhead distribution lines fell sharply last year,
from $49 million in 2001 to only $27 million.
More fundamentally, the protracted power outage demonstrated
the anarchic state of the electrical power system as a whole.
Pepco issued an emergency appeal for additional linemen to help
it restore power, but was only able to recruit a few hundred from
other companies to the north, far fewer than were needed. No central
authority exists to coordinate either the everyday workings of
the power gridwhich currently has 142 separate control centers,
each independent of the othersor the response to an emergency
like Isabel.
In the wake of the storm, there were widespread press reports
of poor performance by emergency preparedness agencies, at both
the state and federal level. County officials in both the Richmond
and Norfolk areas complained that the state of Virginia failed
to respond promptly to requests for water, ice, generators and
other emergency supplies, as well as for emergency personnel.
The mayor of Newport News, Virginia, a city of more than 100,000,
said he had requested water deliveries from the state on Thursday,
but did not receive any supplies until Monday, after the city
had succeeded in restoring its own water system.
Lynda Price, the emergency management coordinator for Chesterfield
County, in the Richmond suburbs, told the New York Times,
I believe that a good part of our problem is with the state
department of emergency management, who continually says, Well
get back to you. They are overwhelmed, undertrained.
There was also criticism of the emergency response by the utilities
themselves. Dominion Power did not even send a representative
to the emergency operations center in Fairfax County, the states
most populous, in the Washington suburbs, and did not return phone
calls from Fairfax, County Executive Anthony H. Griffin.
Jack B. Johnson, county executive of Prince Georges County,
in the Maryland suburbs of Washington, said of both Pepco and
Baltimore Gas & Electric, I want them to know that they
are moving too slowly, and people are running out of patience.
These problems take on added significance, given that the Washington
DC metropolitan area has been the subject of the most intensive
emergency preparedness planning by the Bush administration and
its new Department of Homeland Security, the new super-agency
set up after the September 11 terrorist attacks.
While the Department of Homeland Security controls vast resources
and immense manpower, it is clear that these are not being used
to protect the lives and livelihoods of the millions of working
people who live in the US capital and its surrounding suburbsor
in Norfolk, headquarters of the Atlantic Fleet. Far from being
ready to deal with the consequences of an unpredictable terrorist
attack on Washington, federal and state authorities were unable
even to manage the response to a hurricane whose path towards
the region was being tracked minute-by-minute for a week before
it hit the mid-Atlantic states.
This experience confirms once again that the Bush administration
does not take seriously its own rhetoric about the imminence of
new and even more devastating terrorist attacks on the US mainland,
which it has used to keep the American people politically off
balance and to win support for its wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Since September 11, 2001 the Bush administration, with the
full backing of Democrats and Republicans in Congress, has adopted
a series of the antidemocratic measures, including both the USA
Patriot Act and the establishment of the Department of Homeland
Security. These are aimed, not at protecting the American people,
but at building up the repressive forces of the state for use
against future eruptions of popular unrest, brought on by the
intensifying social crisis in the United States.
See Also:
The US blackout and homeland
security
[20 August 2003]
US: Impact of Northeast blackout
continues to emerge
[20 August 2003]
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