Chattanooga Times Free Press

Georgia power outages continue to drop after Irma passes

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ATLANTA — The number of power outages in Georgia continued to drop Wednesday after Irma slogged through the state as a tropical storm, claiming at least two lives.

Fewer than 520,000 Georgia Power and Electric Member Corp. customers remained without electricit­y Wednesday afternoon. Georgia Power said in a news release that 95 percent of its customers should have their lights back on by Sunday night, except for homes and businesses too damaged to get reconnecte­d.

Gov. Nathan Deal planned to tour storm-damaged areas of northern and coastal Georgia on Thursday. That’s also when coastal Georgia’s second largest county planned to let evacuated residents finally return.

Officials in Glynn County, which includes Brunswick and St. Simons Island, said people could start coming home Thursday morning — two days after the governor lifted evacuation orders. Authoritie­s in the county of more than 83,000 had barred evacuees from returning, saying widespread loss of power, water and sewer service made conditions unsafe.

Meanwhile, authoritie­s Wednesday identified a metro Atlanta man whose death has been blamed on the storm. Stanley Williams, 59, was crushed

Monday when a tree fell on his home in suburban Sandy Springs, said Mark Gilbeau, an investigat­or for the Fulton County Medical Examiner’s Office.

A tree falling onto an occupied car Monday killed a woman in Fosyth County. The sheriff’s office said in a news release that Nancy Eason was fatally injured as the tree pinned the 67-yearold retired court reporter and her husband inside the vehicle. The woman’s husband, Mike Eason, suffered minor injuries. The sheriff’s office said he is a former Cumming police chief and a retired agent with the Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion.

Irma prompted Deal to order evacuation­s for nearly 540,000 people from the Georgia coast. He also declared a state of emergency across all 159 Georgia counties. Though Irma’s center merely crossed Georgia’s southeast corner after churning northward from Florida, tropical storm-force winds spread more than 400 miles across and touched nearly the entire state.

The worst damage was reported along the coast, where homes along the beaches, marshes and rivers flooded from storm surge amplified by unusually high lunar tides.

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON VIA AP ?? Debris from docks that were shredded and boats that were sunk litter the shoreline Tuesday after Hurricane Irma passed over St. Marys on the Georgia coast.
CURTIS COMPTON/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON VIA AP Debris from docks that were shredded and boats that were sunk litter the shoreline Tuesday after Hurricane Irma passed over St. Marys on the Georgia coast.
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Fannie’s By The Sea manager Chris Jackson mops up his flooded restaurant Tuesday on Tybee Island, Ga.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Fannie’s By The Sea manager Chris Jackson mops up his flooded restaurant Tuesday on Tybee Island, Ga.
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON VIA AP ?? Boats blown away from their docks sit in the marsh Tuesday after Hurricane Irma passed over St. Marys on the Georgia coast.
CURTIS COMPTON/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON VIA AP Boats blown away from their docks sit in the marsh Tuesday after Hurricane Irma passed over St. Marys on the Georgia coast.

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