Continuing blackouts cause nuisances
Deepa Bharath
COSTA MESA -- Rolling blackouts Tuesday morning caused two traffic
accidents near Fairview Road, authorities said.
There were, however, no serious injuries in either accident.
The blackouts that lasted roughly between 10:30 a.m and 12:30 p.m. in
several areas off Fairview Road and near South Coast Plaza also shut off
traffic lights in some major intersections.
Both accidents were caused by drivers who drove through dead lights,
said Costa Mesa Police Lt. Dale Birney.
The first crash, which occurred on Fairview near the San Diego Freeway
bridge at about 11:30 a.m., “resulted in moderate injuries to one of the
drivers and possibly a passenger,” he said.
The other occurred at the intersection of Fairview and South Coast
Drive, where a vehicle crossing South Coast Drive was struck by a car
traveling on Fairview. One person suffered minor injuries in that crash,
Birney said.
On Monday, two people were rescued from an elevator in The Lakes
apartment complex on Avenue of the Arts when it became stuck during a
6:30 p.m. blackout, officials said.
“We made contact with the building maintenance” staff, said Barbara
Marcosa, spokeswoman for the Costa Mesa Fire Department. “The people in
the elevator were told how to activate the door-opening mechanism and
were able to get out.”
Newport Beach was spared Tuesday, but the morning was a busy time at
the Costa Mesa Police Department. Officers there were dispatched on short
notice to affected areas as the blackouts were announced.
“We barely get five minutes notice,” said Lt. Ron Smith, who was
juggling calls as watch commander Tuesday morning. “We’re pretty much in
the dark here till something actually happens.”
The goal Tuesday was to get at least two officers to each major
intersection where lights failed, he said.
“It’s pretty labor intensive for us to do this,” he said. “The minute
we know a blackout hits, we flood that area with officers.”
But if the situation persists and spreads over a large area, drivers
are on their own, Smith said.
“When lights don’t work, they have to pretend it’s a four-way stop
sign,” he said.
Local schools were not hit Tuesday, but officials at many said they
were prepared for the eventuality.
Newport-Mesa Unified schools have been asked to check elevators and
save work done on computers, said Mike Fine, the district’s assistant
superintendent of business services. In case of a blackout, students will
remain in the schools, he said.
“It’s just a matter of one hour,” Fine said. “We believe we can
accommodate that.”
Orange Coast College shut off its computer servers for the day,
spokesman Jim Carnett said.
“A sudden power surge could wreak havoc on our servers, and we
couldn’t take that chance,” he said. “We’re just trying to hang in there
and see what the next step might be.”
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