Chicago Sun-Times

63% in Harvey without power

One of ‘hardest-hit areas’ in Monday’s derecho

- BY TOM SCHUBA, STAFF REPORTER tschuba@suntimes.com | @TomSchuba

Three days after a brutal storm tore through the Chicago area, nearly 5,500 ComEd customers in Harvey were still without power Thursday.

That accounts for about 63% of the utility’s customers in the south suburb, said ComEd spokesman John Schoen, who said that 3,595 subscriber­s have had their power restored since the derecho storm system moved through northern Illinois on Monday.

Seven tornadoes touched down during the massive storm, causing widespread outages. But according to Schoen, “Harvey was one of our hardest-hit areas.” ComEd hopes to restore service to 95% of its customers by Friday night, though Schoen said areas like Harvey that were left ravaged “may go longer” without power.

During a news conference Thursday, Harvey Mayor Christophe­r Clark explained that the storm had knocked out the entire city’s power. By Wednesday morning, Clark said 94% of homes were still in the dark.

“That’s when it became a major concern,” Clark said. “The reasons for that is because at that particular time, that’s when food began to spoil. People were staying in their homes . ... They did not have air in their homes . ... They didn’t even have cold water.”

Chris Alonso and his mother, Beatriz Zarate, sat outside their home hours earlier trying to catch a breeze and beat the afternoon heat. With no electricit­y to run their air conditione­r or refrigerat­or, Alonso said the storm has left his family “down and out.”

“You don’t know when anything’s going to come back,” said

Alonso. “As quick as it came is how fast it left.”

When the family tried to rent a room after the storm passed, they learned many hotels were filled with other people who also lost power. Now, with their remaining food going bad, Alonso said he’s unsure when their power will be back.

“I know they’re going to work hard, but I know they’re not going to break their back for nobody,” said Alonso, a constructi­on worker.

The toll of the storm could be seen across the city, including in the 15000 block of Turlington Avenue, where Alonso lives. Next door, the roof of a vacant home had been torn open by a large tree that remained in its side yard.

A few blocks away, near Robey Avenue and 150th Street, ComEd workers used cherry pickers to repair downed power lines as Cook County employees drove through the area picking up the wood that still littered many streets.

Meanwhile, Alonso’s neighbor complained that city officials hadn’t done enough to proactivel­y cut down the untended trees and brush growing on blocks lined with vacant homes and empty lots.

“If Harvey would take care of the landscape in this town, the problem wouldn’t be as big as it is,” said the man, a retired state prison guard who identified himself only as Mr. Williams.

A spokesman for Mayor Clark didn’t respond to a request for comment. But later Thursday, Clark acknowledg­ed to reporters that the storm had “put the city in dire straits.”

 ?? TYLER LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES PHOTOS ?? Downed power lines near 149th Street and Robey Avenue in Harvey on Thursday.
TYLER LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES PHOTOS Downed power lines near 149th Street and Robey Avenue in Harvey on Thursday.
 ??  ?? Beatriz Zarate and her son, Chris Alonso, outside their Harvey home Thursday.
Beatriz Zarate and her son, Chris Alonso, outside their Harvey home Thursday.

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