Power outages in Northwest could continue for days

  • By Manuel Valdes and Jonathan J. Cooper Associated Press
  • Friday, January 20, 2012 4:59pm
  • Local NewsNorthwest

SEATTLE — A Pacific Northwest storm that brought snow, ice and powerful winds left a mess of fallen trees and power lines Friday as tens of thousands of residents already without power faced the prospect of a cold, dark weekend and flooding became a top region-wide concern.

While temperatures warmed and the icy, snowy conditions abated in western Washington and Oregon, slick roads and fast-melting snow brought challenges for road workers, city officials and rescue crews. The region also faces more rain as swelling rivers lead to the worst flooding some Oregon counties have seen in more than a decade.

“It’s definitely a trial we get to endure,” said Jeanette Donigan, whose Turner, Ore., home was surrounded by floodwater, leaving her and her family to seek shelter nearby. “But earthly possessions can be replaced, as long as we got our children to higher ground.”

The storm system has been blamed for three deaths that include those of a mother and her 1-year-old boy, who died after torrential rain swept away a car from an Albany, Ore., grocery store parking lot on Wednesday night; and an elderly man fatally injured Thursday by a falling tree as he was backing an all-terrain vehicle out of a backyard shed near Seattle.

On Mount Rainier, a blizzard kept rescuers from continuing a search Friday on Washington’s Mount Rainier for two campers and two climbers missing in the storm since early this week.

Meanwhile, the system continued its plod east, bringing a first major snowstorm for the winter to parts of the Midwest. More than 700 flights were cancelled in Chicago, the bulk of them at O’Hare International Airport.

The rain in western Oregon resumed Friday, though not as heavily as the previous two days, and forecasters said the Northwest can expect more rain, mountain snow and winds for a week.

A 35-year-old woman who drove a Ford Mustang into 4 feet of floodwaters in Oregon’s Willamette Valley was plucked from the roof Friday by deputies who arrived by boat to save her. It was one of a number of dramatic rescues in western Oregon, left sodden by as much as 10 inches of rain in a day and a half that has brought region’s worst flooding in 15 years.

Interstate 5, the main arterial connecting Seattle and Portland, Ore., was briefly closed Friday morning in both directions near Centralia so crews could remove fallen power lines. Amtrak trains weren’t running Friday between Seattle and Portland, because of trees and other debris that fell on the tracks.

Around midday, Washington State Patrol troopers closed both Tacoma Narrows bridges, which connect Tacoma with communities to the west, because of large ice chunks falling onto the bridge deck.

In Seattle, residents were asked for help clearing the city’s 80,000 storm drains.

Puget Sound Energy used three helicopters Friday to check its transmission lines as crews repair damage from Thursday’s ice storm. There were still about 240,000 without power late Friday afternoon, including 230,000 PSE customers, mostly around Seattle, Tacoma and Olympia. New outages were still being reported Friday. The utility it could take into the weekend or later to get the power back on.

Much of Olympia, was without power. Gov. Chris Gregoire’s office, legislative buildings and other state agencies in Olympia lost electricity for several hours before power was restored. Lawmakers are in the midst of a 60-day session, but some hearings were canceled on Friday. On the main street through downtown, tree limbs littered a park and sidewalks. Main roads were clear, but many residential roads in the area weren’t plowed, and at least one power line had fallen.

Cathie Butler, a spokeswoman for the City of Olympia said they were dealing with “the fallout from all of the heavy ice and snow on the trees.”

Butler said that in addition to first dealing with downed trees and limbs and power lines, the city wants to get snowplows back out to clear primary roads and snow that is piled up on drains.

“We want to try to clear some of that away from the drains so as it starts to rain this weekend the snow and ice have somewhere to go,” she said.

Nancy Kolnen of Issaquah was without power, and had to throw out food in the fridge and layer up to keep warm at night. By Friday, power hadn’t returned and she had no idea when it would.

“Well, going into the weekend, I’m kind of looking forward to (the snow) because it’s nice if you don’t have to drive in it, but if I get home and don’t have power all weekend, I won’t enjoy that,” Kolnen said.

It was still snowing in the Cascades, with up to 2 feet possible in the mountains over the weekend. In Eastern Washington, forecasters expect more snow Friday or freezing rain before warming temperatures on Saturday raise the snow level above the valley floors in some areas.

Sea-Tac Airport was open Friday, and airlines were trying to accommodate passengers whose flights were canceled Thursday. The largest carrier at the airport, Alaska Airlines, canceled 50 of its 120 daily departures Friday. On Thursday, Alaska and sister airline Horizon canceled 310 flights to and from Seattle, affecting 29,000 passengers.

In Seattle, Carly Nelson was negotiating an icy sidewalk on her way to Starbucks. Nelson has been frequenting her neighborhood coffee shop to avoid cabin fever.

“I’m pretty tired of it. It gets old pretty fast. All my friends are stranded in little pockets and you can’t get together to go to yoga,” she said. “I’m just looking forward to being able to go wherever I want to go.”

———

Cooper reported from Oregon. Associated Press writers Doug Esser, Ted Warren, Rachel La Corte, Nigel Duara and Nicholas K. Geranios contributed to this report.

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