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Here’s where 350,000 SoCal residents could lose power due to Santa Ana winds

A person with windblown hair stands in front of the downtown L.A. skyline.
With dangerously strong winds forecast across Southern California this week, utilities are considering shutoffs for safety.
(Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)
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California’s three largest utility companies are all considering shutting off power in regions where dangerously strong winds are expected to heighten wildfire risk this week.

More than 350,000 customers from Kern to San Diego counties could lose power amid the planned safety shutoffs. Portions of the region are under a “particularly dangerous situation” red flag warning, the most elevated fire weather warning.

Just last month, officials had warned of similarly dangerous Santa Ana winds and low humidity when the Mountain fire ignited in Ventura County, and exploded into one of Southern California’s most destructive wildfires in recent history. The strong winds drove the fire into nearby neighborhoods, eventually destroying more than 240 structures, many of them homes.

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A rare December Santa Ana wind event has prompted Southern California Edison to shut off power to thousands of customers.

As of Monday afternoon, power to about 6,000 customers in eastern San Diego County had been shut off as officials continued to monitor the “high fire risk weather conditions,” according to San Diego Gas & Electric. Among the communities experiencing shutoffs were Campo, Alpine and Descanso.

The utility was still considering another 111,000 customers for additional shutoffs across San Diego and Orange counties. The outages are possible beginning noon Monday through Friday, the utility reported.

Southern California Edison was considering planned outages Monday for more than 250,000 customers across a wide swath of its coverage area “due to heightened wildfire risk.”

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The majority of the customers were in Ventura, Los Angeles, San Bernardino and Riverside counties, where more than 40,000 in each county could lose power. About 4,000 SCE customers in Kern County may also lose power.

David Eisenhauer, a spokesperson for SCE, said the utility could cut off power anytime between Monday through at least Wednesday, as winds are forecast to remain a concern.

Pacific Gas & Electric was also considering outages for about 600 of its customers in rural Kern County, according to PG&E spokesperson Jeff Smith. The utility company said that shutoffs were likely through at least Wednesday “due to high winds and dry conditions.”

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The practice of planned public-safety power shutoffs began after downed power lines were found to have started some of California’s deadliest and most destructive fires. The preventive strategy is employed to try to keep electric infrastructure from sparking fires during powerful wind events.

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