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Work Continues To Restore Electricity Across The Region

Several areas of the region are still working hard to restore utilities following the historic wind event Friday afternoon. At the height of the windstorm, more than 300,000 consumers had lost power across the state. “This ranks, as far as storms go, about third all time for our system for number of customers in one day. Once those fronts moved through, we saw those high wind gusts and then by 5:00 we were up past 115,000 (customers without power), “said LG&E KU Spokesperson Daniel Lowery. As of this morning, LG&E KU reported just over 81,000 customers statewide still without power. “Crews have worked to get outages from, at the height of the storm, about 18,000 of our members, down this morning to about 1,200. Obviously we’ve been working since the very first outage started on Friday morning and have encountered just a whole lot of damage across our system. Broken poles continue to be the biggest challenge. We found at least 30 of those at this point, and expect that as the work continues, we may even find more. Those really are the time-consuming parts of this restoration but we are working across our entire system and will continue to do so until all of our members are restored.” said Nolin RECC Spokesperson Sarah Fellows. Additional crews from across the Commonwealth and nine states have been working to help restore utilities. 
Drivers need to be aware that there are still areas where traffic lights are not working. The Kentucky Transportation Cabinet and multiple law enforcement agencies want to remind drivers to treat these as an all stop where each vehicle stops and takes turns passing through the intersection. 

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