The Columbus Dispatch

Cars roll in as tourists return to islands after outage

- By Jonathan Drew

RALEIGH, N.C. — Carloads of tourists rolled in, stores stocked seafood counters and kitchen workers chopped vegetables Friday as two North Carolina islands reopened to visitors after a weeklong power outage at the height of vacation season.

A line of cars was waiting to drive onto Hatteras Island at noon when vacationer­s were allowed to return, said Dare County spokeswoma­n Dorothy Hester. It was a welcome sign that things were returning to normal on Hatteras and Ocracoke islands a week after a constructi­on accident cut power, threatenin­g seasonal businesses’ bottom lines.

Word that power was fully restored Thursday set businesses racing to get ready for a wave of tourists arriving this weekend.

“I went fishing this morning and caught some and cut it and put in the bar anticipati­ng customers coming in,” said Nicholas Wolosuk, owner of Buxton Seafood on Hatteras Island.

He said he also made a special drive off Hatteras Island to a seafood supplier to get fully stocked. He said that Friday and Saturday are crucial days when arriving visitors buy food for the week. While he missed a prime week of business, he’s glad the outage didn’t last longer.

“It’s a relief. I know these boys with the power companies, they have been rolling to get it all get done,” he said.

To the south on Ocracoke Island, the kitchen staff at the Back Porch Restaurant was busy chopping vegetables and doing other prep work ahead of a Saturday reopening. Owner Daphne Bennink said generator power allowed them to save some high-priced meat and seafood, but they lost other food and had to order all new fresh produce.

“I’ve got a staff of about five people who are going to be putting in two full shifts today and tomorrow to be ready for tomorrow’s dinner service, in my case, where everything is prepared fresh from scratch,” said Bennink, who employs 34 total at the restaurant and a cafe that serves lunch.

She said her staff also did a deep clean of the kitchen and tried to stay ready because of the uncertain timeframe for reopening.

“While we’re used to having an evacuation, there’s almost always a weather event that sort of gives us a tangible, visible timeline,” she said. But because of the uncertaint­y about the outage, she said: “We’ve been perched, sort of ready.”

Power was cut to the two islands early on the morning of July 27 when workers building a new bridge drove a steel casing into undergroun­d transmissi­on lines. An estimated 50,000 tourists were ordered to leave during a make-or-break period for seasonal businesses, many of which close during the cold-weather months. It was initially feared that repairs could take weeks.

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