5 Days, No Power For 100,000 Hot NYers

POSTED: 2:51 pm CDT July 21, 2006
UPDATED: 3:07 pm CDT July 21, 2006

A blackout affecting an estimated 100,000 people in New York City's Borough of Queens is in its fifth day, and is being called 10 times worse than previously reported, power company Con Edison said.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg, speaking on his weekly radio show, said he was "annoyed" by the new estimate -- 25,000 customers without power -- because "we might have thrown more resources into the area." Bloomberg later made the 100,000 estimate at a news conference, noting that the term "customer" can refer to more than one household.

"The sad thing is, this shouldn't have happened," Bloomberg said. "We don't know why, but the most important thing -- make sure nobody dies or gets hurt and then help Con Ed to get it back up."

"And then we'll go and try to figure out why and point fingers and beat people over the head and all that sort of thing," added the mayor.

Con Edison said its revised number followed a block-by-block cable inspection in northwest Queens on Thursday night, WNBC-TV reported. Previous estimates came from the number of customers who called to complain.

Similarly, Con Edison said Friday that 35,000 customers in Westchester County -- not the 25,000 reported earlier -- lost power after Tuesday's storm. About 6,000 were still out on Friday morning.

"They have no way of measuring whether or not there's power to your house" until workers make it to that location, Bloomberg said. "They cannot tell from their computers."

"Their estimates at the beginning were based on how many people called up and said, 'My power's not working.' ... You can question whether that's an intelligent way to do it," the mayor said.

Local politicians have jumped into the fray. Assemblyman Michael Gianaris of Astoria called for a "criminal investigation of Con Edison on the grounds of reckless endangerment."

The blackouts started Monday evening. Two LaGuardia Airport terminals were without power Tuesday; the Rikers Island jail complex used backup generators. A number of subway problems around the city this week were believed to be heat or power related, including severe interruptions in Queens on Wednesday, when the temperature hit 100 degrees in some neighborhoods. By Friday, hundreds of Queens businesses remained idle and homeowners had no use of appliances. Some building elevators were not running and traffic lights at some intersections were not working.

"This is outrageous," City Councilman Peter F. Vallone Jr. said Thursday. "When is this going to be fixed? If it's going to be days, they should tell people it is going to be days."

Spokesman Chris Olert said Friday that the power company was making every effort to get the situation fixed, but couldn't estimate when that might happen. He said the company didn't know why things went wrong.

"Chances are fair, but not firm, that it was heat related, but right now that is just a hypothesis," he said.

That was little consolation for Gianni DellaPolla, 26, a baker at Gian & Piero Bakery.

"We probably lost $25,000 in business in three days," DellaPolla told the Daily News. "Everything like wedding cakes, eggs, creams, we had to throw all that out."

Con Edison has more than 500 splicers, troubleshooters, mechanics and support personnel working around the clock. Its crews are inspecting thousands of manholes and service boxes, as well as transformers and miles of cable.