Georgia Power offers Helene restoration progress report

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ATLANTA – Georgia Power’s restoration efforts following Hurricane Helene continued through Sunday into the new week, with the company having restored service to approximately 690,000 customers since the start of the storm. This immediate response has been possible through the implementation of new “smart grid” technologies and the quick work of pre-positioned teams who were ready to respond as soon as conditions were safe to do so on Friday.

Crews continue to navigate treacherous conditions, including extensive tree and flooding damage, as well as road closures. Efforts are ongoing to restore power to approximately 425,000 customers who remain without power due to the storm. Additionally, there is the potential for further damage and power outages that could occur due to the saturated ground and weakened trees.

Georgia Power has determined Hurricane Helene was the most destructive hurricane in the company’s history, damaging infrastructure across the state. Initial damage estimates illustrating the extensive destruction of Hurricane Helene include:

— 5,000+ power poles that must be repaired or replaced;

— 9,000+ spans of wire equivalent to an estimated 425 miles;

— 500+ transformers;

— 1,500+ trees on power lines that must be removed or addressed to restore power.

As the company anticipated and announced before the arrival of the storm, restoration efforts will take multiple days into this next week. Georgia Power continues to post updated estimated restoration times for communities on its Outage Map. As of Sunday, restoration efforts have been largely completed in areas such as metro Atlanta, Columbus, Macon, Rome and Albany, while work continues in the hardest hit areas across the state.

The company will continue to post updated information throughout the remainder of the restoration process and will make every effort to return power to customers sooner than expected. Customers are encouraged to check the Outage Map often for the latest information and not rely on possibly inaccurate details they may see from non-company sources.

The company continues to utilize additional resources from outside of its system and currently has more than 15,000 personnel engaged in response, including support from Alabama Power, Mississippi Power and dozens of other companies. The response force currently engaged is larger than the company’s response to other major hurricanes including Michael, Irma and Zeta.

Georgia Power monitored the path of Hurricane Helene for more than a week prior to the storm entering Georgia. As part of its preparations, Georgia Power mobilized additional staff from across the industry to respond to the hurricane. Mobilized crews across the state pre-positioned restoration workers, equipment, and supplies near areas of anticipated impact, including extra transformers, poles, cable and other equipment. All this is part of advance planning and strategy to allow the company to restore power more quickly and efficiently for its customers as soon as weather conditions allow.

Georgia Power is also a member of a nationwide mutual assistance network, which consists of hundreds of utilities from around the country. Georgia Power has proactively mobilized crews from more than 35 companies from states as far away as Texas, Oklahoma, Indiana, Pennsylvania and New Jersey. The company continues to acquire additional off-system resources to aid in response.

As always, the company encourages customers to keep safety first following Hurricane Helene:

— Watch for Georgia Power crews working across the state. If driving, move over one lane for utility vehicles stopped on the side of the road – it’s the law in Georgia;

— Watch for downed wires. Downed power lines may be hidden by debris or fallen trees;

— Never touch any downed wire or attempt to remove tree branches from power lines – it can kill;

— Don’t step in standing water or saturated ground where downed lines may be present. They could be electrified;

— Avoid chain link fences. They may be electrified by a downed line out of sight and conduct electricity over great distances.

— Never attempt repairs to electric service connections. Customers should also note that if their home, including the meter box or mast/connection point, is severely damaged by the storm, repairs may need to be made by an electrician before Georgia Power can reconnect power.

Tools customers can use to stay connected and informed:

— Outage Alerts: Customers subscribed to the free Georgia Power Outage Alert service will receive personalized notifications and updates via text message. Check that contact number is up to date to receive the latest information.

— Outage & Storm Center: Available at www.GeorgiaPower.com/Storm, customers can visit this site to check their contact information is updated to receive Outage Alerts, report and check the status of outages, and access useful safety tips and information. Customers can also report and check the status of an outage 24 hours a day by contacting Georgia Power at (888) 891-0938.

— Outage Map: Housed within the Outage & Storm Center, Georgia Power’s interactive Outage Map provides near real-time information, allowing users to see where outages are occurring across the state and track estimated restoration times.

— Georgia Power Mobile App: Download the Georgia Power mobile app for Apple and Android devices to access storm and outage information on the go.

— @GeorgiaPower on X (Twitter): Follow @GeorgiaPower on X for storm tips, outage updates, customer service and more.

Special Photo: Georgia PowerSpecial Photo: Georgia Power

Downed power poles in Tifton are among the more than 5,000 that must be repaired by Georgia Power.

Author

Except for a brief period, Albany Herald Editor Carlton Fletcher has been a newspaperman, working as Sports Writer/Columnist for the weekly Ocilla Star, as Sports Writer/Sports Editor with The Tifton Gazette, and as Sports Writer/Copy Editor/News Reporter/Features Editor and Editor of the paper. He has won numerous awards for sports, news, business and column writing, including a first-place Business Writing award in last year’s Georgia Press Association awards competition.

Read Carlton’s stories.

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