Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

De Blasio calls for probe as many wait for power to return

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NEW YORK (AP) >> Mayor Bill de Blasio called for an investigat­ion Monday of power outages that came at the end of this weekend’s oppressive heat, saying he no longer trusts utility Con Edison after it decided to turn off power to thousands of customers.

Around 30,000 customers in Brooklyn were taken off power Sunday, so the utility could make repairs and prevent a bigger outage, de Blasio had said earlier.

On Monday, he offered a blistering assessment of that decision.

“This should not have happened,” he told reporters, “and we need to make sure it doesn’t happen again.”

De Blasio said the private company is “not accountabl­e to the public in a way a public agency would be.”

“Con Ed is very haughty about this,” the mayor said. “They don’t give real answers, and they don’t feel they have to.”

The company defended its decision, saying in a statement to The Associated Press that it was “necessary to prevent longer outages to the impacted customers that would have occurred as a result of additional equipment damage.”

“We are completely focused on getting customers back in service, and we regret the distress they are under,” spokesman Allan Drury wrote in an email.

De Blasio’s remarks came as Con Ed was working to restore power to about 19,000 customers, many of them in southeast Brooklyn.

The utility said in an emailed statement that it was working to restore power to everyone by the afternoon, but as of 5 p.m. Monday, about 10,800 customers remained without power, mostly in Brooklyn.

Like much of the East Coast, New York City experience­d temperatur­es in the high 90s over the weekend — and felt much hotter with the humidity. Temperatur­es were starting to fall Monday, and city emergency management officials warned of thundersto­rms.

“It’s still hot and people have a right to be frustrated. We’re pushing Con Ed to get power back as fast as possible,” De Blasio tweeted.

De Blasio said that New York City emergency management was adding personnel on the ground in southeast Brooklyn, including at nursing homes and adult care facilities, to respond to emergencie­s and keep people safe.

De Blasio told reporters the city still does not have answers in the wake of outages a week ago that crippled the heart of Manhattan, knocking out power businesses and residents for more than three hours along a 30-block stretch.

“I’m extremely disappoint­ed with Con Ed,” the mayor said. “They have been giving us consistent­ly inconsiste­nt informatio­n over these last days.”

Gov. Andrew Cuomo said he deployed 200 state troopers, 100 generators and 50 light towers to Brooklyn, as well as personnel and command vehicles from the state Office of Emergency management. He urged New Yorkers to check on neighbors, especially the elderly.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Mayor Bill de Blasio is calling for a “full investigat­ion” into the power outages in New York following this weekend’s high temperatur­es.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Mayor Bill de Blasio is calling for a “full investigat­ion” into the power outages in New York following this weekend’s high temperatur­es.

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