Dallas County power outages will last multiple days as more storms approach, officials say
DALLAS — Power outages caused by severe weather Tuesday morning in Dallas County will likely span days as more storms approach the region, officials said.
County Judge Clay Lewis Jenkins signed a declaration of disaster as more than 322,000 residents were without electricity. Oncor reported more than 600,000 of its customers, including Dallas and Tarrant counties, were experiencing an outage as of Tuesday morning.
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“This is not a [power] generation problem like we sometimes have when it’s cold or in the heat of the summer,” Lewis Jenkins said during a news conference at the Dallas County Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Management. “This is a broken lines problem brought about by straight-line winds.”
Lewis Jenkins said workers responding to the outages face several challenges moving forward, especially as storms are expected to bring more rain and winds to the area as soon as Tuesday evening.
“The damage itself is not unusual because we do have straight-line winds frequently here in North Texas, but the extent of the damage and the number of the customers affected is unusual,” he said. “I’ve been doing this for 14 years and I don’t remember ever having a multi-day event quite like this one.”
Tuesday morning’s storms created baseball-sized hail, winds exceeding 80 mph and a “significant amount” of cloud-to-ground lightning, Oncor spokesman Grant Cruise said, but linemen were prepositioned to respond to outages and mobilized immediately to critical facilities.
Assessment crews were also out in the region looking at isolated outages as of Tuesday afternoon, he said.
“We did have a significant number of downed lines because of this weather event,” Cruise said. “In many cases, it’s not going to be simple repairs. We’re looking at complete reconstruction for parts of our area.”