Los Angeles Times

END IN SIGHT FOR GOLETA FIRE

- By Amina Khan

John Givens digs through the ruins of his Goleta home Saturday. Officials expect the Holiday fire to be contained by Wednesday.

Roughly 29,000 Los Angeles-area homes and businesses remained without power Sunday in the wake of the weekend heat wave, officials said.

Utility crews have restored power to more than 57,000 customers since the spell of unusually hot weather swept through the region Friday, said Joseph Ramallo, a spokesman for the Los Angeles Department of Water andPower.

By Sunday evening, about 26,500 DWP customers were without

power.

Neighborho­ods with outages include Silver Lake with 1,804 affected customers, Echo Park with 1,972, Leimert Park with 1,758, Mid-Wilshire with 3,692, Westlake with 2,285 and Koreatown with 2,868. In the San Fernando Valley, Panorama City and Sherman Oaks reported 1,441 and 81 customers without power, respective­ly.

Peak energy demand climbed past 5,700 megawatts Saturday, surpassing the department’s estimate of roughly 5,500 megawatts and marking the second-highest weekend day use recorded in Los Angeles, officials said. That was down from 6,256 megawatts Friday, which broke the previous July record of 6,165 megawatts set in 2006 and became the fifth-highest peak demand recorded in the city’s history.

Some portions of the city’s electrical system sustained major damage from the record-breaking heat, including damage in some neighborho­ods to undergroun­d cables, overhead wires and transforme­rs, Ramallo said.

Many outages will take 24 to 48 hours to fix, and some could take longer, Ramallo said, adding that there were more than 700 individual incidents in DWP’s system Saturday.

“A smaller outage can take the same number of resources as a larger outage,” Ramallo said, “which is what makes restoratio­n slower, unfortunat­ely.”

There are more undergroun­d circuits in neighborho­ods such as Windsor Square, Hancock Park and Koreatown, he added. Although undergroun­d circuits are more reliable, during an outage they’re a little more difficult to quickly repair.

Some 2,525 Southern California Edison residentia­l and business customers remained without power just before 8 p.m., spokeswoma­n Susan Cox said Sunday. That’s down from Saturday night, when about 17,000 customers were without power. The outages include 1,882 customers in Los Angeles County, 203 in Riverside County and 182 in San Bernardino County.

“As the weather cools and our crews are out there working to restore power to customers in the heat, we are getting customers back up,” Cox said.

There was no set time frame for when all the power outages would be repaired.

“We’ve got crews and they are working through the heat … as quickly and safely as possible,” Cox said.

A heat advisory remained in effect until 9 p.m. Sunday, said meteorolog­ist Tom Fisher of the National Weather Service in Oxnard. Temperatur­es have begun a very slow descent from their Friday peaks, with coastal areas seeing a more significan­t drop.

The high in downtown Los Angeles hit 96 degrees Sunday, while Burbank hit 97. Several areas saw tripledigi­t temperatur­es, including Woodland Hills at 104, Lancaster at 105 and Pasadena at 100.

Temperatur­es should continue a gradual downward trend, Fisher said. “Most areas will be a couple of degrees above normal by the end of the week,” he said.

By Friday, downtown Los Angeles is expected to dip to 84 degrees; normal temperatur­es for downtown usually hover around 82. Woodland Hills should fall to 92 degrees by Thursday. Highs near Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport may drop to 78 on Friday, down from 92 this last Friday.

 ?? Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ??
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times
 ?? Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ?? JOHN GIVENS douses himself with water on Saturday as he searches through the remains of his Goleta home, one of 10 razed by the Holiday fire. The blaze was perhaps the most destructiv­e of several that broke out across Southern California over the weekend.
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times JOHN GIVENS douses himself with water on Saturday as he searches through the remains of his Goleta home, one of 10 razed by the Holiday fire. The blaze was perhaps the most destructiv­e of several that broke out across Southern California over the weekend.
 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? A FOREST SERVICE truck travels through mud and debris Saturday in Forest Falls, Calif. Storms in the mountains could have undermined hillsides already weakened by the Valley fire.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times A FOREST SERVICE truck travels through mud and debris Saturday in Forest Falls, Calif. Storms in the mountains could have undermined hillsides already weakened by the Valley fire.
 ?? Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? A HEAT advisory remained in effect Sunday. Above, Stefano Alippi, dressed up as Freddy Krueger, cools off Friday in between photos with tourists in Hollywood.
Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times A HEAT advisory remained in effect Sunday. Above, Stefano Alippi, dressed up as Freddy Krueger, cools off Friday in between photos with tourists in Hollywood.
 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? CHILDREN cool off Friday in Lytle Creek in the San Bernardino National Forest. Temperatur­es are expected to continue a gradual downward trend this week.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times CHILDREN cool off Friday in Lytle Creek in the San Bernardino National Forest. Temperatur­es are expected to continue a gradual downward trend this week.

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