Winds wreak havoc
- Share via
Deepa Bharath
It was so windy that trees dropped down with a thud, power lines
collapsed and some didn’t have to turn off the light switch before
going to bed.
It was so windy that makeshift stop signs at blacked-out traffic
lights blew away and street signs snapped off the beams and hung on
one bolt like an action movie victim waiting to be rescued.
It was so windy that boats slipped off their moorings.
It was so windy in Newport-Mesa on Tuesday that the Harbor
Patrol’s wind-measuring device broke.
Santa Ana winds winnowed through the streets like a fiery vandal
Sunday night and Monday morning, littering the streets, tearing down
tree branches and mercilessly slapping outages on hundreds of homes.
Both Costa Mesa and Newport Beach suffered from an array of
effects. Cleanup crews worked through the day.
“We had at least 20 larger trees as well as tree limbs go down,”
said Bill Morris, Costa Mesa’s director of public services. “Most of
the trees and limbs took the power lines with them, and we had people
working from 6 a.m. almost until 5 p.m.”
Southern California Edison officials said several hundred
customers in the Newport-Mesa area were without power Monday morning.
As of Monday evening, 90 customers were in the dark in Costa Mesa and
200 in Newport Beach. Some areas may remain without power until late
this morning, officials said.
Edison crews will prioritize outages that pose the greatest public
hazards, said Kim Scherer, an Edison spokeswoman.
“At this point, we don’t know exactly how long it’s going to take
to wrap it up,” she said. “The outages are spread throughout the
cities and it is difficult to pinpoint specific areas.”
Newport-Mesa public safety agencies were also busy taking calls
from anxious residents. Police officers manned inoperable traffic
lights. There were no major incidents reported as a result of the
outages, but drivers like Steve Stafford sure believed it was “crazy
out there.”
“It’s pretty bad,” he said, talking on a cell phone, while the
wind howled in the background. Stafford said he had just driven down
Bristol Street and the lights were out at the Irvine Avenue, Campus
Drive and Jamboree Road intersections.
“It’s 10 times worse because the wind is blowing off the four-way
stop signs at the blacked-out intersections,” he said. “No one’s
stopping, people are trying to beat each other and it’s kind of
scary.”
Orange County Sheriff’s Harbor Patrol deputies worked overtime
Monday on two fireboats and several patrol boats.
“We’ve had several boats drift off their moorings,” said Deputy
Herbert Siegmund. “Earlier [on Monday], a sport fisher got torn off
the docks.”
The Harbor Patrol issued a small-craft advisory late Sunday night
that will remain in effect today. Gusts of 60 mph also shut down the
Balboa Ferry on Monday.
The winds are expected to last at least until this afternoon, said
Frank O’Leary, meteorologist at the National Weather Service in San
Diego.
“We have a high-wind warning for all areas through [this]
morning,” he said. Balmy temperatures -- in the high 70s -- can also
be expected, as always, with the Santa Ana winds, O’Leary said.
* DEEPA BHARATH covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at [email protected].
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.