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Very surreal--I was standing in a McDonald's when all the power went out, it was very weird. Looks like it stretched from Downtown to West LA and through the Valley. That's a huge blackout. They don't think it's terrorism, however.
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ha, ha! this is the second time i beat dj with news!!
Quote:
Blackout Hits L.A.; Terrorism Ruled Out
By LAURA WIDES
The Associated Press
Monday, September 12, 2005; 5:22 PM
LOS ANGELES -- A blackout hit a large portion of the Los Angeles area Monday afternoon, snarling traffic at intersections and trapping people in elevators.
The city was investigating the cause of the outage. But Sgt. Catherine Plows, a police spokeswoman, said terrorism was not suspected.
The electricity went out shortly before 1 p.m., and outages were reported from downtown to the Pacific Coast and north into the San Fernando Valley, an area encompassing hundreds of thousands of residents and thousands of businesses.
Some Los Angeles neighborhoods did not lose power at all, and electricity was restored in some areas within an hour.
Los Angeles International Airport lost power, but its emergency generator kicked in promptly and no flights were affected, said Harold Johnson, an airport spokesman. UCLA Medical Center used backup generators and reported no danger to patients.
Downtown high-rises went dark, fire officials said they received reports of people stuck in elevators, and stoplights went out at intersections across the city. Neighboring cities, including Burbank and Glendale, also were affected.
The Police Department went on "full tactical alert," meaning no officers were allowed to leave work when their shifts were over.
The blackout came a day after ABC aired a videotape of a purported al-Qaida member making terrorist threats against Los Angeles and Melbourne, Australia, on the fourth anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks.
Homeland Security Department spokesman Russ Knocke said federal authorities were talking to state and local counterparts about the power loss, but "there is no indication of any nexus to terror."
Heavy power usage can lead to blackouts. But the weather in Los Angeles was not unusually hot Monday, with temperatures around the low 70s when the power went out.
An official with the city Department of Water and Power said it appeared the problem began when two power receiving stations failed. That forced several larger generating stations to shut down, according to Robert Rozanski, chief administrative officer.
The receiving stations get high-voltage power from the generating stations and convert it to lower voltage so that it can be used throughout the city.
"We are doing everything we possibly can to find out the source of the problem," Rozanski said.
Last edited by jenna2891; September 12th, 2005 at 02:44 PM.