As of 8 p.m. on October 30, Southern Maryland Electric Cooperative (SMECO) has restored service to all customer-members in Calvert, Charles and Prince Georgeโ€™s County impacted by Hurricane Sandy. In St. Maryโ€™s County, the 22 storm-related outages that remain as of 8 p.m. will be restored tonight with the exception of four customer accounts in Scotland that cannot be restored because of flooding.

SMECO began to assemble its pre-storm workforce last week. Linemen, tree clearing and safety personnel from electric co-ops in North Carolina and Georgia joined contractor crews and SMECO crews to form the largest pre-storm restoration workforce in SMECOโ€™s 75-year history.ย  As of Tuesday, there were 152 crews composed of 555 field personnel working to restore power to SMECO customer-members.

โ€œThe size and scope of Hurricane Sandy as it headed toward the mid-Atlantic states called for extensive measures as we prepared to be slammed with heavy rains and high winds,โ€ said SMECO president and CEO Austin J. Slater, Jr. He added, โ€œWe were expecting a storm of historic proportions and prepared for it by assembling the largest workforce in our history. It was truly an honor to be a part of this mobilization of resources and restoration process.โ€ย 

From October 29 at 9 a.m. until 2:30 p.m. on October 30, SMECO experienced 905 incidents. An incident is a damage event which can range from a blown transformer to a tree on a line or a broken pole.ย  Over the course of the storm, SMECO experienced 41,340 outages: 10,680 in Calvert County, nearly 10,000 in Charles County, more than 2,200 in Prince Georgeโ€™s County, and about 18,460 in St. Maryโ€™s County. SMECOโ€™s system peak number of outages occurred at 8:30 p.m. on Monday, October 29, when a transmission line went down and nearly 11,500 customers were without power at one time.

As SMECO restored service to its remaining customers, Slater expressed his gratitude when he said, โ€œWe have done our best to get our customer-members back online in as short a time as possible, and we appreciate their patience and understanding as we worked to make necessary repairs.โ€