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Major Power Outage Hits California, Arizona, Mexico

JULIE WATSON   09/ 9/11 12:46 AM ET   AP

SAN DIEGO — A major power outage knocked out electricity to up to 5 million people in California, Arizona and Mexico on Thursday, bringing San Diego and Tijuana to a standstill and leaving people sweltering in the late-summer heat in the surrounding desert.

Two nuclear reactors were offline after losing electricity, but officials said there was no danger to the public or workers.

San Diego bore the brunt of the blackout that started shortly before 4 p.m. PDT.; most of the nation's eighth-largest city was darkened. All outgoing flights from San Diego's Lindbergh Field were grounded and police stations were using generators to accept emergency calls across the area.

Parts of Orange County regained power Thursday evening, but officials said most people would remain in the dark through the night.

The outage was likely caused by an employee removing a piece of monitoring equipment that was causing problems at a power substation in southwest Arizona, officials said. The power loss should have been limited to the Yuma, Ariz., area. The power company, Arizona Public Service, was investigating why the outage wasn't contained.

"This was not a deliberate act. The employee was just switching out a piece of equipment that was problematic," said Dan Froetscher, a vice president at APS.

Homes and businesses were darkened from southern parts of Orange County to San Diego to Yuma. It also affected cities south of the border across much of the state of northern Baja. Border officials said crossings into California are open.

"It feels like you're in an oven and you can't escape," said Rosa Maria Gonzales, a spokeswoman with the Imperial Irrigation District in California's sizzling eastern desert. She said it was about 115 degrees when the power went out for about 150,000 of its customers.

In Tijuana, people wandered out of their hot homes into the street to cool off while restaurants scrambled for ice to save perishable food.

In San Diego, the trolley system that shuttles thousands of commuters every day was shut down and freeways were clogged at rush hour. Trains were stopped in Los Angeles, an Amtrak spokesman said, because there was no power to run the lights, gates, bells and traffic control signals.

Police directed traffic at intersections where signals stopped working.

Blake Albert Jordan, 20, saw a trolley come to a screeching halt as he neared the platform. Dozens of passengers emptied onto the tracks when the doors opened.

Jordan said he called about 20 friends and family to pick him up in San Diego's Mission Valley, where he was visiting a friend, to his home in suburban Lemon Grove. None offered to venture on the roads.

When a transmitter line between Arizona and California was disrupted, it cut the flow of imported power into the most southern portion of California, power officials said. The extreme heat in some areas also may have caused some problems with the lines, said Mike Niggli, chief operating officer of San Diego Gas & Electric Co.

"Essentially we have two connections from the rest of the world: One of from the north and one is to the east. Both connections are severed," Niggli said.

Niggli said relief was on its way, slowly. He said his 1.4 million customers may be without power until Friday.

Two reactors at the San Onofre nuclear power plant went offline at 3:38 p.m. as they are programmed to do when there is a disturbance in the power grid, said Charles Coleman, a spokesman from Southern California Edison. He said there was no danger to the public or to workers there.

The outage came more than eight years after a more severe black out in 2003 darkened a large swath of the Northeast and Midwest. More than 50 million people were affected in that outage.

In 2001, California's failed experiment with energy deregulation was widely blamed for six days of rolling blackouts that cut power to more than 3 million customers and shut down refrigerators, ATMs and traffic signals.

In Arizona, about half of Yuma County had power again Thursday evening after losing it earlier. Yuma County has about 200,000 residents and a little under half live in the city of Yuma.

"It's 113 degrees right now outside," said Yuma city spokesman Greg Hyland, who was sitting in the dark, answering calls.

Capt. Mike Stone of the Orange County Fire Authority said several people were trapped and rescued at the tony Ritz Carlton hotel in south Orange County.

In southern Orange County, the sheriff's department dispatched deputies to busy intersections because traffic lights were out, said John McDonald, a sheriff's spokesman. Outages were confirmed in San Clemente, San Juan Capistrano and Laguna Hills, he said.

Traffic was backed up in some areas, and the Orange County Register reported that fire crews were dealing with numerous calls of people being trapped in elevators.

_____

Associated Press Writers contributing to this report include Elliot Spagat in San Diego; Gillian Flaccus in Orange County; Shaya Mohajer in Los Angeles; and Walter Berry in Phoenix.

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SAN DIEGO — A major power outage knocked out electricity to up to 5 million people in California, Arizona and Mexico on Thursday, bringing San Diego and Tijuana to a standstill and leaving peopl...
SAN DIEGO — A major power outage knocked out electricity to up to 5 million people in California, Arizona and Mexico on Thursday, bringing San Diego and Tijuana to a standstill and leaving peopl...
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11:04 PM on 09/10/2011
solar flare
01:36 AM on 09/11/2011
It does appear to be predicted. 

It certainly explains it from a scientific point of view. 

On the other hand, is that the total story? 

What should be a Sputnik moment for California, is lost the dreams of Governor Moonbeam. 
02:53 PM on 09/10/2011
Earlier in the week there were numerous article posts on a massive solar flare that was not supposed to hit earth hard but only cause increased aurora activities. It was supposed to peak on Thursday. No mention of what impact it might of had? Come on now, where is all the mystery. I remember sticking an instrument in a large electrical panel at a hospital many years ago. I saw a spark and the whole hospital went down. I thought it was my work but later found that a backhoe cut an underground line. Coincidence maybe?
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Charles Queen
I am a disabled nam vet
12:29 AM on 09/10/2011
I also learned that we are supplying power to a small part of Mexico from this.I heard on the news last night that the cause of the power outage was caused by nothing more than a worker accidently removing a monitoring device and that one tin y little mistake cased many people to lose power
01:36 AM on 09/11/2011
Seriously, you swallow the whole story without the least shred of doubt? 
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Charles Queen
I am a disabled nam vet
01:55 AM on 09/11/2011
Ya,I have no doubt that this caused the ower outage.It doesn't take very mcuh at all ti interupt service by one litle mistake.Thats all it takes in some cases
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Canadiananana
I used to be disgusted...
07:25 PM on 09/09/2011
Simpson, Homer Simpson,
He's the greatest guy in history...... D'oh!!
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Charles Queen
I am a disabled nam vet
12:31 AM on 09/10/2011
Yes and also very very wise as well.It was Homer who said that alcahol is the reson and solution for all of lifes many problems
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laborgrunt
06:36 PM on 09/09/2011
There are more than 3.4 million people in San Diego County alone, why do I keep hearing this 1.4 million number?
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01:28 PM on 09/10/2011
Well? duh,with the lights out it was easy to miss some .
04:21 PM on 09/09/2011
I live in north san diego county near the coast, and soon after the power went down, military craft, helicopters etc were patrolling up and down the shoreline into the night. It may have been just one employee error, one piece of equipment, but that is mind boggling if our entire power infrastructure hangs by such a slim thread.

Also it was announced that two separate lines were severed going different directions, later that was corrected or glossed over. Apparently the critical 'piece' the wayward employee removed affects both lines.

And that millions in Mexico in northern Baja were on the same power grid was news to me -- who knew!??

Whole thing does not pass the sniff test -- but if indeed official reason IS true -- we are in some real trouble
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RobietheCat
Altruism with someone else's money isn't
04:46 PM on 09/09/2011
Exactly.

Big glaring error. How did a technician in AZ affect a separate coming from the north? Makes no sense.

On the other hand, we have had indications that the grid is vulnerable due to its connections to the Internet which are a new development:

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fgw-cyber-attack-20110910,0,5366016.story

http://news.cnet.com/8301-1009_3-10216702-83.html

http://www.crn.com/news/security/216500177/u-s-power-grid-hack-highlights-security-weaknesses.htm
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rshrink
02:21 PM on 09/09/2011
How did Jay Leno and Bill Nye manage through all of this?
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mlaiuppa
Pres. Sarcasm Society. Like we need your approval.
02:15 PM on 09/09/2011
My power came back at 3 am. 12 hours. Not bad since they were saying maybe a day, maybe two days. Their simulations predicted 3 days.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
KJLSanDiego
02:20 PM on 09/09/2011
They most likely way overshot their prediction of how long it would take so people wouldn't fr3@k out if it was taking longer than reported.
01:58 PM on 09/09/2011
I feel that the extremely poor choice of terminology chosen by spokesman and COO of SDG&E created entirely unnecessary concerns of terrorism amongst many southern California citizens who felt that we'd been "attacked" in this week of remembrance of 9/11.

What do I mean?

The initial and appropriate information regarding the power loss was that --- "When a transmitter line between Arizona and California was DISRUPTED, it cut the flow of imported power into the most southern portion of California, power officials said."

Mike Niggle (COO for SDG&E) then stated "Essentially we have two connections from the rest of the world: One of from the north and one is to the east. Both connections are SEVERED."

Mike Niggle's use of the term "SEVERED", rather than "DISRUPTED" - along with offering (at that time) no further explanation as to cause - created the distinct impression that the actual Transmission Lines across the desert had been CUT. When local radio stations in Southern California made the announcement that the grid's main system had been "SEVERED"; most people assumed that meant the 100,000 volt transmission lines had been CUT. Creating quite a little wave of panic in this week of the 10th anniversary of 9/11.

Perhaps next time SDG&E makes an announcement of this substance... they'll think about their terminology before they speak..........
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RobietheCat
Altruism with someone else's money isn't
03:21 PM on 09/09/2011
Perhaps they were telling the truth at first.

Who know how or why they came up with the cockamamie story about the rogue technician, which makes NO SENSE.

If that tech could do that, a lot of people could.
05:01 PM on 09/09/2011
Well, your point about it being possible for others to create a similar problem seems pretty much true.

That said... as best as I can decipher the info available... he wasn't a "rogue" - just a tech sent out to do a job of replacing a piece of grid-management equipment that was failing.

The issue apparently was that the system that was supposed to insure that this simple replacement process didn't create a power-loss for 6 million people, didn't engage/work as it was designed to.

That in itself is getting just a little too typical... remember the B.P. oil rig fiasco in the Gulf was created by a similar failure of a response system designed to avoid catastrophe.
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rshrink
01:58 PM on 09/09/2011
Total reliance on centralized power sources are a problem. Does anyone think we might ever catch on?
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KJLSanDiego
02:22 PM on 09/09/2011
Some places are smarter than others.
Santa Clarita, CA has it's own source and grid, for example.
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Jim NLN
Obama 2012 and beyond!
01:37 PM on 09/09/2011
This would not have happened if each state had their own isolated electrical grid. You know, like the 50 difference health insurance plans. You know, so the insurance companies can screw us 50 different ways...........
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Howard Scott Pearlman 59
01:13 PM on 09/09/2011
If they have backup generators shouldn't a power plant have a back up monitor on line that is plugged in so they can switch over to it while working on the primary moniter ?

NASA has 3 moniters running and if one fails the next one takes over.

There are somethings that Private business needs to pay more for instead of being too cheap that they end up biting off their nose to spite their face.

Shouldn't Nuclear plants be required to NASA like 3 moniters on all cricitcal . Or being as it is a Nuclear Plant having 5 or 6 backup systems should be much better.

Statistically speaking a chance of all 3 Nasa systems failing would be 5% or 5 out of a hundred now in the case of Nuclear plant by having 6 systems needed to fail it would be .00025 0r 25 out of 10,000.
02:11 PM on 09/09/2011
You are entirely correct... and they do have a version of what you correctly believe would make good sense.

Unfortunately the alternate system --- which would have at least avoided the power-loss beyond that immediate area --- failed to come online.
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mlaiuppa
Pres. Sarcasm Society. Like we need your approval.
02:21 PM on 09/09/2011
Well, yeah. But a back up would cost money. If you force them to, that would require MORE regulations. Oh, the horrors! We must remove all regulations so companies can make bigger profits. Remember these are private, for profit monopolies.

That's privatization for you.

And now they want to privatize schools.
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Howard Scott Pearlman 59
01:00 PM on 09/09/2011
This is what happens when you put all of your eggs in one basket !

When you interlink everything it makes it so much easierto take it all down !
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rshrink
12:56 PM on 09/09/2011
Now, if we were Bachman republicans, we might say, "this is a sign from God." Well, it is a sign of how foolish it is to rely on fossil fuels and a sign that we need to continue to develop ways to dramatically reduce our dependency on them. We subsidize fossil fuel usage in so many ways which never are factored into most discussions. First, tax subsidies are not factored into most analyses, Secondly, we subsidize the oil and gas and nuclear by allowing them to pollute, to take our common product of our earth and use it to make enormous profit with and then we taxpayers get to clean up their messes from mining, burning and storing. Think of the cost to the Japanese now, cleaning up after the nuclear emissions. Some are paying with their lives and they will be paying through health costs for several generation­s. So, you are thinking subsidies in the most myopic way of measuring. The long term cost for continuing fossil fuel usage could be the inability of the planet to sustain life for humans and other species. How would you put a number to that cost?
12:53 PM on 09/09/2011
Why are we spending hundreds of billions of dollars on homeland security when all it takes to render all of that security useless is some technician in Yuma, AZ flipping the wrong switch? I live in San Diego and it is the home of numerous major militray installations, electronics firms, SPAWAR, and other critical defense assets. All of them were knocked off-line yesterday. May we need to stop spending hundreds of billions of dollars on "homeland security" that can be undone so easily.
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rshrink
01:57 PM on 09/09/2011
Yes, maybe we could spend a few more dollars on staff and training. Hey, that would be a way to reduce unemployment. Are we on to something here?
02:14 PM on 09/09/2011
I think so - training is crucial and so is employment. Win-Win.