A tree that has fallen due to the weight of ice in Troy, NY. |
|
Storm type | Freezing rain and ice storm |
---|---|
Formed | 11 December 2008 |
Dissipated | 12 December 2008 |
Damages | around 2.5 to 3.7 billion |
Fatalities | 4[1] |
Areas affected | New England and Upstate New York |
The December 2008 ice storm of New England and Upstate New York was a damaging ice storm that took out power for millions of people in those regions. The storm was deemed the worst ice storm in a decade for New England[2] and the most severe in 21 years for Upstate New York.[3] Damage was primarily a result of fallen trees and fallen utility wires and poles, which were coated in a heavy layer of ice. The storm raised heavy controversy over the slow return of power, as at the storm's peak as many as 1.7 million customers were without power.[4] Days after the storm more than 800,000 customers were still without power.[5] Almost a week after the storm still more than 100,000 customers were without power, affecting the holiday shopping season and crippling the business and transportation of many northeast cities for days.[6]
Contents |
The storm resulted in a state of emergency being declared by Governor David Paterson in sixteen counties in New York.[7] Up to 300,000[8] utility customers lost service in New York's Capital District.[3] By Sunday evening, 14 December, 126,000 were still estimated to be without power.[9]
Fire departments in Albany and Rensselaer County ran non-stop all weekend answering calls ranging from fires to wires down. It is estimated that both counties received tens of thousands of calls by the Saturday after the storm.
In Massachusetts up to one million residents and businesses lost power due to the storm, causing Governor Deval Patrick to declare a state of emergency[10] and mobilize at least 500 national guardsmen to help the clean-up efforts.[8]
Governors John Lynch of New Hampshire and John Baldacci of Maine also declared a state of emergency, and as of 13 December at least 400,000 customers were without power in New Hampshire,[11] and at least 172,000 were without power in Maine.[8] This total in New Hampshire was more than five times larger than those who lost power in the ice storm of 1998, previously the most devastating storm on record.[11]
It has also been reported that over 30,000 customers were without power in Vermont and up to 3,700 were without power in Connecticut.
The American Red Cross of Northeastern New York opened multiple shelters around the Capital District to give residents a warm place to stay and eat.[12]
At least four deaths were attributed to the storm. Three of them were due to carbon monoxide poisoning, the source of which were gas-powered generators that were used indoors. One carbon-monoxide-related death was in New Hampshire, and the other two were in New York.[13][1] The fourth fatality occurred in Massachusetts. A public works employee was found in a reservoir after having gone missing when investigating damage to trees.[1]
Hotels,[14] hardware stores,[15] malls, and restaurants[16] that either had power or a generator saw a boom in business during the entire weekend as many residents went out to finish up holiday shopping, eat, and stay warm. Most schools closed on Friday, 12 December, and some colleges ended the semester early due to the severity of the storm.[17]
Fourteen days after the storm hit, several thousand homes throughout New Hampshire were still without power,[18] which in some cases resulted in threats being made against workers of Public Service Company of New Hampshire (a subsidiary of Northeast Utilities), the principal electricity supplier of New Hampshire.
Similarly, there were many people in Massachusetts without power for up to two weeks, raising many questions about the slow response of some utility companies.[19]
Several weeks after the New England storm, a similar ice storm struck the Midwestern United States, knocking out power to a million people and leading to at least 38 deaths.[20]
The storm and its aftermath were covered extensively by local newspapers such as The Keene Sentinel and the Monadnock Ledger-Transcript in New Hampshire. Books detailing the storm's toll include The Weight of the Ice by David Eisenstadter,[21] Black Ice compiled from various New Hampshire authors,[22] and Ice by the staff of The Keene Sentinel.[23]