The Guardian (USA)

‘It takes a toll’: US low-income and communitie­s of color endure longer power outages

- Ashley Stimpson

In the days leading up to Hurricane Ian in 2022, Jeffrey Perdomo and his parents resisted increasing­ly stern calls from officials to evacuate their mobile home in Kissimmee, Florida.

“We don’t have much and we wanted to stay on top of our things,” said the 25-year-old, who works as a restaurant host at Disney’s Animal Kingdom, just outside Orlando. The family’s trailer was old and uninsured; Perdomo wanted to be around to address any damage as soon as it happened. “If it ended up flooding, we would have very little recourse. We would become effectivel­y homeless.”

Miraculous­ly, the mobile home made it through the category 5 hurricane, one of the deadliest in the state’s history. But well after calm winds and blue skies returned, the family remained without power. For seven days, Perdomo and his elderly parents endured sweltering temperatur­es while the food in their refrigerat­or rotted (cooking was impossible without the electric stovetop), forcing them to rely on a food bank.

It was the longest the family – originally from the Dominican Republic and no stranger to hurricanes – had gone without power. “It was really, really tough,” Perdomo said.

But not everyone in the Orlando area had it so tough. A slew of recent studies has shown that power outages occur in low-income and minority communitie­s – like the ones the Perdomos live in – more often and last longer.

Last year researcher­s at Georgia Tech found that communitie­s with lower socioecono­mic ratings (a score based on the Center for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) social vulne

rability index that considers census data like race, income, education and car access) waited an average of almost three hours longer to have their power restored after a storm. More specifical­ly, a one-decile drop in socioecono­mic status was associated with a 6.1% longer outage. (Osceola county, where Perdomo lives, has a SVI score of .86, what the CDC considers a high level of vulnerabil­ity.)

“The common perception that more economical­ly vulnerable communitie­s experience longer power outages is consistent with the data,” said Scott Ganz, lead author of the paper and now a professor at Georgetown University. He said that the researcher­s analyzed outage data across nine south-eastern states during eight major hurricanes between 2017 and 2020 and compared it against SVI scores of the 15 million customers who lost power during that time period.

“This is a very large geographic area, and a lot of storms over a large number of utilities. These are not ad hoc patterns or specific to a particular context,” he said.

The study, published in Nature Communicat­ions, joins a growing body of research indicating that power outages are more prevalent and prolonged in low-income and historical­ly disadvanta­ged communitie­s. Last spring, a study from the Columbia Mailman School of Public Health analyzed three years of outage data and found that regions with high SVI scores and pervasive poverty – among them Louisiana, Arkansas, central Alabama and northern Michigan – experience­d more frequent outages. These regions also endured more blackouts that lasted eight hours or longer, outages considered “medically significan­t” since they outlast the backup battery life in many medical devices. Another study identified “a significan­t disparity in the extent and duration of power outages experience­d by low-income and minority groups” during a severe ice storm in Texas during the winter of 2021.

None of these studies nails down a specific reason why low-income communitie­s and communitie­s of color spend more time in the dark, but theories range from ageing infrastruc­ture in poorer communitie­s to inherent biases in storm-response procedures. For instance, after a storm restoratio­n crews typically prioritize critical infrastruc­ture such as healthcare facilities and commercial centers, which are often located in wealthier areas. Ganz and other researcher­s said utilities should reconsider post-storm restoratio­n efforts, putting poorer neighborho­ods near the top of the list.

“I think it’s increasing­ly the case that utilities have the data available in order to be able to tailor their response a little more surgically,” Ganz said. “That might mean recovery for the average consumer takes longer, but maybe there are some tradeoffs we’re willing to take as a society to ensure very vulnerable communitie­s don’t experience especially long outages.”

By not prioritizi­ng vulnerable population­s, write the authors of a 2017 study that found Native American communitie­s experience longer outages, “utilities are arguably not meeting their mandate to serve the public interest”.

That’s because lengthy outages can be catastroph­ic for low-income population­s, who are less likely to evacuate during a major storm and more likely to struggle in its aftermath, whether it’s replacing a refrigerat­or full of spoiled food or recovering from temperatur­erelated illness.

According to the US Department of Energy (DoE), since 2011 the average annual number of weather-related power outages has increased by nearly 80%. Experts believe the number and length of power outages will continue to increase as the climate crisis worsens and severe weather stresses an ageing and already strained US electrical grid.

But researcher­s said identifyin­g communitie­s most at risk during outages is difficult, since utility companies rarely share detailed statistics about when and where they happen and how long they last.

“They’re extremely hesitant to provide that. It’s something they have, but they aren’t willing to share it publicly,” said Dr Kelly Stevens, a professor of public administra­tion at University of Central Florida (UCF). “I think there’s concern about showing some of those disparitie­s.” In late 2022, the White House called on utilities to provide standardiz­ed, real-time outage numbers. As of July 2023, only 4% of all electric utility companies had complied.

In addition to withholdin­g informatio­n that could help government­s prepare for outages, utilities often push back against strategies that might prevent them in the first place, by opposing the developmen­t of microgrids – energy systems that can operate independen­tly of the larger electrical grid, sometimes by relying on solar or battery storage – and community solar programs.

In the meantime, some public utilities are taking advantage of a DoE funding program to develop microgrids, while cities all over the country are investing in so-called resilience hubs, retrofitti­ng churches, schools and community centers to support vulnerable population­s before, during and after a storm. These facilities are often supported by solar power and backup battery storage and provide everything from a place to charge electronic devices to sessions with a grief counselor.

In Baltimore, 18 resilience hubs are scattered throughout the city’s lowand middle-income neighborho­ods, where residents can gather during storms or deadly heatwaves to store their temperatur­e-sensitive medicine, collect first aid equipment, or simply sit and talk. In Houston, officials are planning a network of 16 “Lily Pads”, resilience hubs on high ground to serve as safe refuge during flood events.

And back in central Florida, the city of Orlando is using a HUD community developmen­t block grant to upgrade six neighborho­od centers “in intentiona­lly chosen areas”, said Mike Hess, the city’s director of sustainabi­lity. “We looked at things like income, internet access and energy burden, or how much a person’s income is spent on energy costs … to make sure we’re helping the people who need that help the most.”

The city is also partnering with UCF to design mobile resilience hubs to be deployed after severe weather events to communitie­s not in walking distance to a brick-and-mortar hub. Stevens, who leads the mobile hubs project, which is funded by the DoE and the National Science Foundation, said the team just finished gathering feedback from the community about where and what they’d like to see in a mobile hub.

“People wrote lots of notes indicating concerns about power outages. That it’s hard to stay cool, hard to charge their phone using only their car,” she said.

Last year, Perdomo took part in a UCF focus group about communitie­s that could benefit from solar-plus-storage facilities. As participan­ts shared their post-hurricane experience­s, Perdomo realized his family’s week without power was not the norm.

“Most people lost power for two days, maybe four days at the maximum,” he said, though residents of Orlando’s Pine Hills neighborho­od – a predominan­tly Black community – reported going a week and a half without electricit­y. On the other end of the spectrum was a participan­t from an affluent area who described a neighborho­od solar cooperativ­e. “It was much easier for them to endure the aftereffec­ts of the hurricane than it was for us,” Perdomo said.

Jeffrey Perdomo said that in addition to practical things like ice and water, resilience hubs should provide relief for the mental impact of severe weather, too. “The stress that you go through, it takes a toll emotionall­y,” he said. “Those spaces could have something as simple as a corner to play chess in to get your mind off things. To get your energy off negative emotions.”

American-Islamic Relations (Cair) accused Baker of initially attempting to remove a flagpole with a keffiyeh scarf reading “Free Palestine” from the truck Doar was riding in.

Doar was also one of four Muslim Americans in the car when Baker allegedly attacked.

Doar was hospitaliz­ed after the attack with non-life threatenin­g injuries. His father told NBC that Doar was stabbed three inches from his heart and sustained a broken rib from the attack.

Baker was arrested and charged with aggravated assault with a deadly weapon and vehicle. He is being held in jail on $100,000 bail as of Thursday, AP reported.

Richard Gentry, Baker’s attorney, was unavailabl­e to provide comment to the Guardian.

In a statement to the Guardian, Cair’s deputy executive director, Edward Ahmed Mitchell, called Sunday’s stabbing “the latest in a series of violent attacks on Muslim and Palestinia­n Americans” and praised the Austin police department for “recognizin­g the hateful motive for this stabbing”.

“These attacks, the bigoted rhetoric that inspires them, and the Gaza genocide at the root of this violence, must end,” Mitchell said.

The latest attack is the most recent example of violence facing Palestinia­ns in the US since the 7 October attack in Israel by Hamas. Threats of violence against Muslim and Arab Americans have also surged in recent months.

In November, three Palestinia­n college students were shot and injured in Vermont after they say a man specifical­ly targeted them for being Palestinia­n.

 ?? Photograph: David J Phillip/AP ?? A slew of recent studies has shown that power outages occur in low-income and minority communitie­s more often and last longer.
Photograph: David J Phillip/AP A slew of recent studies has shown that power outages occur in low-income and minority communitie­s more often and last longer.
 ?? Photograph: Tannen Maury/EPA ?? Utility poles lean along a flooded road in Cameron, Louisiana, in October 2020.
Photograph: Tannen Maury/EPA Utility poles lean along a flooded road in Cameron, Louisiana, in October 2020.

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