Sonoma County residents prep for PG&E Red Flag Warning power outages

ByKatie Utehs KGO logo
Monday, October 15, 2018
Sonoma County residents prep for PG&E Red Flag Warning power outages
Santa Rosa and other Sonoma County cities are on stand-by as PG&E could shut-off power during a Red Flag Warning.

SANTA ROSA, Calif. (KGO) -- Santa Rosa and other Sonoma County cities are on stand-by as PG&E could shut-off power during a Red Flag Warning. It's an effort to preempt wildfires sparked by downed power lines during high wind events similar to the fires that devastated the North Bay last October.

Pat Abercrombie says he's ready for a power outage or a fire evacuation. He supports PG&E's pre-emptive efforts of cutting power to avoid more devastating fires.

"A downed power line is going to start a fire so I'm totally behind it. I believe that it needs to be judicious," said Abercrombie.

Abercrombie and his wife evacuated Healdsburg's Fitch Mountain area last year during the Pocket Fire.

Sunday night, the wind is calm on the mountain, but earlier in the day he put out his red flag to warn his neighbors of the high fire risk forecasted through Monday.

RELATED: Several Lake, Napa county schools cancel classes due to fire-related power outage

If the power goes out some 339 homeowners in the area are on their own. There's no cell service or landlines. Abercrombie will have to rely on battery-operated radios.

"If we know that the power is being taken down to avoid the opportunity for a fire to catch, I'm going to be paying a lot of attention. You'll notice my truck is backed into the carport," said Abercrombie

PG&E says they're doing everything they can to notify people early especially customers who need power for medical support.

"We also have dispatched trucks and employees to knock on doors of about 4,400 medical baseline customers and we will continue to call these customers as the shut-offs continue," said Andrea Mennitti, PG&E spokesperson.

Abercrombie and others have started neighborhood alert groups because if there's a fire they'll likely be on their own to evacuate. He does say the long-term solution for preventing fires would be to bury the overhead lines underground.