Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

2 power failures leave burst pipes, icy offices

Overloaded circuit, squirrels blamed

- EMILY WALKENHORS­T

The temperatur­e didn’t change when David Goble stepped from the frigid weather outside into the Arkansas Repertory Theatre building, and that was the first sign things were awry.

The seven-hour power failure in downtown Little Rock overnight Tuesday knocked out The Rep’s boiler and thus its heating system. It was just one of several problems related to the power failure that lingered throughout the downtown area Wednesday.

After hours at work, Goble, The Rep’s facilities manager, said his feet hadn’t thawed from the upper-teens temperatur­es he’d experience­d outside Wednesday morning.

“My toes are just constantly numb,” he said.

The power failure was caused by an electrical demand overload, according to Entergy Arkansas. It shut down heating systems and resulted in some frozen water pipes overnight, causing some to burst early Wednesday.

The outside temperatur­e was 14 degrees at 3 a.m., when power was restored. Temperatur­es reached a high of 39 degrees just before 2 p.m. Wednesday, according to the National Weather Service in North Little Rock.

A pipe burst above the lobby in the Cromwell building at 101 S. Spring St., and water knocked out an undergroun­d electric switch that powers the Cromwell and Pulaski County government buildings. None of the buildings had electricit­y until Wednesday afternoon.

Downtown Pulaski County offices were closed, but county treasurer employees worked from home and from five Arkansas Revenue offices across the county, according to Treasurer Debra Buckner.

A separate power failure in west Little Rock led to a burst pipe at The Point and Brodie Creek apartment complex.

The separate electrical failures had different causes, Entergy Arkansas spokesman Kerri Case said. The downtown circuit was overloaded because of the cold night’s electricit­y demand, which caused a breaker to throw and shut off power. In west Little Rock, squirrels knocked a recloser box open for an extended period of time.

About 500 individual accounts were affected by the downtown power failure, Case said, and another 600 were affected by the power failure in west Little Rock.

It was business as usual Wednesday for many businesses and offices downtown, with people filing in and out of restaurant­s along Main Street at lunchtime.

The 21-story Union Plaza building on Capitol Avenue was a bit chilly for a while, but after the power was restored it operated normally with all offices open, according to Kirk Ray, a building security guard.

Rhonda Hetland left for lunchtime errands before a sprinkler head broke on the second floor and flooded the lobby of the Lafayette building on South Louisiana Street. Hetland managed to avoid the noontime chaos and said her fourth-floor job as a licensing specialist at the Arkansas State Board of Collection Agencies was operating as it would any other day.

Doug Coffman, a spokesman for the Little Rock Fire Department, said a window had been left open overnight on the building’s second floor, which led to a frozen pipe that ruptured while thawing.

Work wasn’t quite as usual at The Rep, where actors rehearsing for The Call left for their housing at Peachtree Apartments on Sixth and Rock streets because the theater was too cold. They rehearsed at home.

The Rep’s boiler is controlled by an electronic switch, said Zach Rhodes, the box office manager. When the electricit­y went off, no signals were sent to the boiler, so it was cold in the building Wednesday morning. Rhodes turned on two space heaters and worked in his office for a time before deciding to go home in the afternoon.

Editors, page designers and a reporter worked by flashlight and wireless routers Tuesday night at the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette on Capitol Avenue to finish the newspaper. Some newspaper deliveries were delayed Wednesday morning, and the newspaper’s website, arkansason­line.com, was knocked out.

The website remained out of commission Wednesday evening, with Arkansas Online staff members posting articles on the newspaper’s Facebook page. Some newsroom desk phones also were not functionin­g Wednesday night.

The power failure also shut off electricit­y Tuesday night at the KATV building on Main Street. A backup generator allowed the station to produce a full nighttime broadcast, according to news anchor Chris May.

The downtown power failure began Tuesday about 8:40 p.m., Case said, and power was restored by 3 a.m. Wednesday.

About a dozen Entergy workers, bundled in brown

coveralls, to between to said. feeds which blacked identify restore Workers Eventually, and both The the two substation­s, powers throughout out the Garland the power, Gaines worked downtown, dozen the on-site Tuesday Garland Gaines workers problem, the Case worked substation, substation at while area the traveled substation two night. substation, discovered said. trying night Case that another remotely affected breaker electricit­y Because a for to thrown Case that power the from time had temperatur­es said. undergroun­d the other cut being. They area off substation­s electricit­y, with decided were workers to problems, risk only well creating gradually could she below said. restore conductivi­ty 25 That so degrees, as power took not until Shortly building about the after pipe 3 a.m. began power in the to was Cromwell thaw restored, and senior chief ruptured, operating vice president said officer Jim of Rice, and the Little Visitors Rock Bureau, Convention the building’s and fourth-floor He received tenant. a phone call that about a 4 pipe a.m. had informing burst in him the center the lobby, of the and building, water above had flooded the floor and some offices. He headed into the office to survey the damage firsthand.

“It was a serious breach,” he said.

A restoratio­n crew vacuumed up the water, and Rice said he expects damage to be minimal, although he hadn’t ruled out the need to replace the carpet.

In the Chenal Ridge neighborho­od in west Little Rock, squirrels burrowed in the substation, opened the recloser box and got caught in the gears, Case said. That caused a power failure from about midnight Tuesday to noon Wednesday.

A few weeks ago, workers chased away squirrels that had nested in the recloser box area and caused a power failure, Case said. Workers repaired the box, which Case described as an automated circuit breaker. Intermitte­nt power failures because of the recloser box followed, and workers kept repairing it.

On Wednesday morning, they discovered that squirrels had continued to nest there, after workers found two that had “met their maker” in the gears of the equipment, Case said.

The box was again repaired, but Entergy workers will replace it and the primary cables because squirrels had chewed through the cables’ insulation, she said.

That work could take until Friday to complete, and intermitte­nt power failures are possible until then, Case said.

Workers will also reseal openings in the substation as a part of their “critter mitigation” plan, she said.

 ?? Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/STATON BREIDENTHA­L ?? A thrown undergroun­d breaker cut off electricit­y to Entergy Arkansas’ Garland substation in Little Rock and led to a blackout downtown.
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/STATON BREIDENTHA­L A thrown undergroun­d breaker cut off electricit­y to Entergy Arkansas’ Garland substation in Little Rock and led to a blackout downtown.

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