Power out for 10 hours after car accident on Lopez | Update

Submitted by OPALCO

All of Orcas, Shaw, Blakely and some of Lopez Islands were without power for almost 10 hours after a car accident on Lopez took out a transmission pole at 10:30 a.m. on Friday, Aug. 17. Power was completely restored by 8:15 p.m. to Orcas, Shaw and Blakely and by 11:30 p.m. to all of Lopez. The driver of the truck involved in the accident is recovering from minor injuries.

OPALCO crews responded immediately and made the scene safe for fire personnel to extinguish the fire caused by the accident. While the fire suppression and mop-up operations were underway, the OPALCO crew worked on switching (rerouting power away from the fault, where bypass routes are available) to get as much power to Lopez as possible, including restoring power to the ferry landing. As crews from San Juan and Orcas arrived foreman Brian Swanson brought everyone up to speed on the project. The linemen installed a new pole, built out the pole top, and then transferred the high-voltage conductor to the new pole. The broken pole caused some damage along the transmission line; crews repaired and replaced cross arms and insulators on adjacent poles and then began the process to bring the power back up.

Thanks to the folks at Blossom Grocery, Lopez Village Market and neighbors in the area who brought refreshments to the crew during their long day of construction work.

Currently, all of the 20 islands served by OPALCO receive power through a main feeder on Lopez. However, a second redundant feeder – or tap – was installed this year on Decatur Island, which will give OPALCO the ability to route power on an alternate path in case of an accident or emergency such as occurred on Friday. OPALCO crews are completing conductor and substation upgrade projects to prepare the distribution system to carry power from the new tap on Decatur all the way into Eastsound when needed. The new feeder path is scheduled to be energized in November.

OPALCO’s 24/7 off-site call center manages the high-volume of member calls during an outage and populates the new real-time outage map to keep members informed. Members with mobile phones can check the map, Facebook and Twitter for outage information. Those who do not use mobile phones can call into OPALCO’s phone system for less-detailed updates – or ask a friend with a mobile phone to relay information. OPALCO fielded more than 500 phone calls from members during this outage.

During an outage, it is difficult to estimate when restoration will be complete as testing can reveal additional issues before the full load can be brought back up. OPALCO is conservative about setting expectations for restoration times because of the number of variables in restoring power in the islands but is committed to giving regular updates on actual progress.

Orcas Power & Light Cooperative, or OPALCO, is the local member-owned cooperative electric utility, serving more than 11,000 members on 20 islands in San Juan County. OPALCO provides electricity that is 95 percent greenhouse-gas free and is generated predominantly by hydroelectric plants. OPALCO was founded in 1937. Follow OPALCO @OrcasPower on Facebook and Twitter.

Contributed photo/Steve Horn                                Linemen and equipment from Lopez, Orcas and San Juan worked for almost 10 hours to rebuild transmission line after a car accident knocked down a pole.

Contributed photo/Steve Horn Linemen and equipment from Lopez, Orcas and San Juan worked for almost 10 hours to rebuild transmission line after a car accident knocked down a pole.

Contributed photo/OPALCO

Contributed photo/OPALCO

Contributed photo/OPALCO

Contributed photo/OPALCO

Contributed photo/Steve Horn                                Construction of pole top in progress.

Contributed photo/Steve Horn Construction of pole top in progress.