Daily Press

Duke Energy: NC equipment repaired

- By Hannah Schoenbaum

RALEIGH, N.C. — Duke Energy said Wednesday repairs are complete on substation equipment damaged in shootings over the weekend that cut electricit­y to thousands of central North Carolina homes, and power was expected to be fully restored by midnight.

In a statement on its website the energy company said all of the equipment damaged in an attack on two North Carolina substation­s Saturday has been fixed or replaced.

The company said Moore County customers would gradually get power back throughout the day.

“To avoid overwhelmi­ng the electrical system we will bring power back on gradually, with the goal of having the majority of customers restored before midnight tonight,” the statement said.

As of late Wednesday morning about 14,000 customers were without power in the county, according to poweroutag­e.us. That’s down from a peak of more than 45,000 customers over the weekend.

Authoritie­s have said the outages began shortly after 7 p.m. on Saturday, when one or more people drove up to two substation­s, breached the gates and opened fire on them.

Police have not released a motive or said what kind of gun was used. But Moore County Sheriff Ronnie Fields told reporters Monday that whoever was responsibl­e “knew exactly what they were doing to ... cause the outage that they did.”

The FBI posted a notice Wednesday seeking informatio­n related to the investigat­ion.

Schools are closed through today. Once power is restored, the district requires 24 hours to prepare the facilities before it can welcome back students.

FirstHealt­h Moore Regional Hospital, a 402-bed acute care facility in Pinehurst, regained power shortly after 9 a.m. on Wednesday and was gradually transition­ing from emergency generators to normal power, the hospital website said.

The county’s transporta­tion services are operating only for clients who have scheduled dialysis, chemothera­py and radiation treatment, according to the Moore County website.

 ?? KARL B DEBLAKER/AP ?? Workers repair equipment Wednesday at a substation in West End, North Carolina.
KARL B DEBLAKER/AP Workers repair equipment Wednesday at a substation in West End, North Carolina.

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