With storms come risk of blackouts
More rain and high winds are expected to blow into Southland this week. Here’s how to get ready for a power outage and ride it out.
Intense rain and high winds will probably mean power outages this week for some Californians.
The storm system expected to move into Southern California starting Sunday night will bring “at least that much rain, if not more” than the one that rocked California last week, causing flooding and mudslides, toppling trees and knocking out power to homes, said Robbie Munroe, a meteorologist for the National Weather Service in Oxnard.
Any time you have this much water and wind, you risk blackouts.
Here’s what to do before and during a power outage.
How to prepare for a blackout
Check your emergency kit. For a potential outage — and any other kind of disaster that might strike — you want to have an emergency kit in place.
Have your supplies ready, including nonperishable food, drinking water, flashlight batteries, a fire extinguisher, cash, a first-aid kit and a hand-crank weather radio (you can find a full list of useful items here). Have gloves, goggles, duct tape and plastic sheeting on hand in case something like a falling tree branch breaks a window.
Also have a bedside mini-kit if you wake up during a nighttime outage and need to get around in the dark: Hard-soled shoes, a flashlight and a spare pair of eyeglasses or contacts if you wear them.
Make a plan for your family. Every plan will look different. If you have young children, make sure you have enough formula, diapers and other supplies to last a few days. If you have pets, double-check your kibble stash. Make sure everyone who takes medication has a few days’ worth on hand.
If a family member uses a mobility device, figure out how you’ll get them out of your building without using an elevator. If someone uses a medical device that plugs in, make sure it’s fully charged and you have a battery-powered backup option.
Write down pertinent phone numbers for family members, doctors and insurance companies, in case your smartphone dies and you lose access to your contacts. Decide where you’ll go if you need to evacuate.
Charge devices, fill your tank, check your batteries.
Keep all your phones, tablets, e-book readers and laptops fully charged. Consider charging an extra battery pack, if you have one. Fill your gas tank or charge your electric vehicle’s battery. Check the batteries in your flashlights and smoke and carbon monoxide detectors, and get extras.
Sign up for emergency alerts and watch for outage information.
Sign up at Notify L.A. if you live in Los Angeles. If you’re elsewhere in L.A. County, you can find your municipality’s alert system at Ready L.A. County. Outside of L.A. County, search “emergency alerts (your city or county).”
To stay up to date in case of potential blackouts, sign up for alerts from your electricity provider and bookmark its website’s map of outages. In much of Southern California, the provider is Southern California Edison, whose website has an outage
map and lets you sign up for alerts by email, text and phone.
In Los Angeles, you can check the L.A. Department of Water and Power outage map and, if you have an account with the DWP, sign up for alerts on its website. San Diego Gas & Electric has an outage map online and instructions on how to download the app with alerts. And Pacific Gas & Electric, which serves much of the rest of California, has outage maps online and alerts.
Prep power-free meals and activities.
Come up with a couple of ideas for meals and snacks that wouldn’t require you to open your fridge or freezer or use electricity-powered heat to cook. If you have something irreplaceable in the freezer, like breast milk, consider filling the freezer with cold packs or water bottles. A fuller freezer stays frozen longer. Gather your puzzles, board games, and books for prime time.
Learn how to open your garage door manually, or leave it open.
If you need to evacuate or someone in your house has a medical emergency, you’ll need to access your vehicle.
What to do during a power outage
Stay home. It’s safer in your house than out on the roads when streetlights might be out. Unless you’re ordered to evacuate or need to go somewhere else for health reasons, just stay put.
Avoid opening the fridge and freezer.
A closed refrigerator, even without power, can keep food at safe temperatures for four hours and 24-48 hours in the freezer, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Every time you open the fridge, you’re losing precious degrees.
Don’t light candles. Flashlights and other battery-operated light sources are much safer.
Unplug things that aren’t plugged into surge protectors. When the power comes back on, you don’t want to blow out your appliances. You should turn off all but one light, so you’ll know when the power is back without risking a surge.
Save your phone and laptop battery for
emergencies only. Yes, it’s tempting to kill time scrolling through social media or knocking out Wordle. But it’s better to reserve that battery power for checking for emergency updates. Tackle a jigsaw puzzle or catch up on your reading.
Stay up to date on alerts.
To get the latest information on the storm, you can listen to radio livestreams from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration at any time online, or via your hand-crank weather radio (that’s why you put one in your emergency kit). Keep checking your outage map and your electricity provider’s Twitter account for updates.
Heed evacuation orders. If you’re ordered to evacuate, leave quickly. And have your “go bag” — containing water, nonperishable food and other items — ready.
What to do when the power returns
Check on neighbors and local family members to make sure everyone’s OK.
Turn lights back on and plug in appliances. Anything that was on a timer will need to be reset.
Check appliances and ensure everything is working.
Check the food in your fridge and freezer to make sure it’s still safe. If the power has been out for less than four hours, the food in your refrigerator should still be safe to eat. After that, food may be unsafe for consumption if it’s reached an internal temperature of 40 degrees Fahrenheit. FoodSafety.gov has a list of which foods to discard.
Stay away from downed power lines and tree branches.
Reconnect your garage door opener if you set it to manual.
Restock your emergency kit to replace the supplies you used. And if you don’t have a kit, sign up for Unshaken, our eight-part newsletter series about disaster preparedness that includes tips for creating one.