Published time: December 02, 2014 16:42
Spokespeople for the city and DTE Energy confirmed at around 11:00 a.m. local time on Tuesday that most of Detroit’s municipal grid is offline, preventing power from being delivered to police stations, schools, traffic lights and other city-run facilities and services.
Municipal buildings were being evacuated, WXYZ Radio anchor Alicia Smith tweeted early Tuesday, although eyewitnesses on the ground told her shortly after 11 a.m. that people were reportedly becoming stuck in elevators.
#BREAKING:
#Detroit
spokesman says most of municipal grid is down -no power to
police,fire,municipal bldgs,schools,jails,traffic lights,etc.
— Alicia Smith (@wxyzalicia) December
2, 2014
According to Smith, a spokesperson for the city of Detroit
confirmed that most of the municipal power grid was down.
Residential structures are apparently unaffected, and some of the
emergency facilities — like fire stations — have back-up
generators, a local Fox News affiliate reported.
Every fire house in Detroit right now has a power outage,
Detroit Fire Department confirms
— Robert Allen (@rallenMI) December
2, 2014
“It looks like the entire Detroit Public Lighting system is down.
Affecting about 100 buildings, places like The Joe, Frank Murphy
Hall of Justice, fire stations, schools. We were notified about
10:30 a.m. We’re working with them to help resolve the situation.
We’ll help investigate the problem and make repairs. It’s too
early yet to determine what has caused the shutdown,” Scott
Simons of DTE Energy Co. told the Detroit News.
Evacuations happening throughout downtown due to a massive
power outage #Detroit#Local4pic.twitter.com/xCNbefgCXf
— Jamal Bransford (@VideoManJamal) December
2, 2014
Detroit Fire Chief Jack Wiley added to Fox 2 that every one of
the city’s firehouse was experiencing outages early Tuesday.
Around 50 buildings on the local Wayne State University campus
were impacted as well, according to the college, and grade
schools in the city were shutting down for the day.
“We have crisis plans in place. There are backup generators running in buildings, especially buildings with labs,” Tom Reynolds, associate director of public relations for Wayne State University, told Detroit News journalist Holly Fournier.
This is what evacuating 900 student visitors looks like!
#DetroitPowerOutagepic.twitter.com/tCjhh7FV8c
— Detroit Inst of Arts (@DIADetroit) December
2, 2014
According to the paper, a high-profile murder-for-hire trial was
interrupted due to the outages.
"This is unusual ... it's cold. They don't own a generator? They should look into that,” one attendee at the proceedings told the News.