Power restored after outage in Lunenburg County
17,000 Nova Scotia Power customers lost power Friday morning
Power has been restored to most of the 17,000 people affected by outages in the Bridgewater, Mahone Bay and New Germany areas Friday morning.
Nova Scotia Power spokesperson David Rodenhiser said issues with the substation in Bridgewater caused the outages.
He said the substation receives bulk electricity from the transmission lines and converts it to lower voltages before it's sent out to the distribution lines in the area.
"The crews at the substation resolved the issues there and got the power safely restored to the customers," said Rodenhiser.
According to the Nova Scotia Power website, around 600 customers across the province were still without power as of 12:15 p.m., mostly in the Rhodes Corner and Mahone Bay areas.
Outages an ongoing issue, says mayor
David Mitchell, Bridgewater's mayor, said he's concerned by the frequency of power outages. He said outages have an impact on local businesses, especially on Friday — the first day many of them reopened after Christmas.
"We've got grocery stores that have been closed for a couple of days, you've got businesses that have been closed for a couple of days, so a lot of people are expecting today to be able to go out and resupply," he said.
He said while Bridgewater only has a population of about 9,000, thousands of people from the surrounding areas pour into the community every day to shop or access services.
"It affects the local economy of the community ... because we have stores that can't operate," he said.
The number of power outages in the last year is concerning <a href="https://twitter.com/nspowerinc?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@nspowerinc</a>. We understand when they are weather related but when commerce is impacted on a busy day like today (calm & sunny), an explanation is needed (or compensation provided). <a href="https://twitter.com/nsgov?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@nsgov</a> is adequate NSP $ being invested
—@CommonSenseNS
Mitchell said he's noticed more frequent power outages in the last two years.
"It's a beautiful, sunny day, there's literally no wind today," he said.
"If it was a storm, that's understandable. But on a day like today, we should definitely not be expecting power outages."
Rodenhiser said there's a wide variety of reasons why outages can happen.
"Including trees making contacts with lines, vehicle accidents, issues caused by equipment failures," he said.
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