Oklahomans shiver, worry after 10 days without powerStory Highlights
Some smalltown Oklahomans feel forgotten as they wait for power to be restored
Ice storm on December 9 knocked out power to ½ million homes, businesses
Utilities say most customers will have power by Thursday; some will wait longer
Two-day storm blamed for 27 deaths in Oklahoma
SKIATOOK, Oklahoma (AP) -- Huddled near her fireplace, Marla Carter wondered when Skiatook will be mentioned in news reports about the storm-related power outages that have left her without electricity for the past 10 days.
Dale Yingst cleans up storm debris in Broken Arrow, Oklahoma, on Tuesday.
"It's kind of like we've been forgotten about out here," she said Tuesday. "There is life outside Tulsa."
Carter and thousands of other Oklahomans were still without power Wednesday, more than a week after a massive storm coated the most populous regions of Oklahoma with ice.
Oklahoma's utility companies expect to restore service to most of their customers Wednesday or Thursday. But the company that provides electricity to Skiatook, 30 miles north of Tulsa, estimated that it would be Christmas before 99 percent of its customers were back on line. Watch family without power for 10 days »
The National Weather Service forecast another storm would arrive in the state Friday night, bringing as much as 3 inches of snow to northern Oklahoma and thunderstorms to other parts of the state.
President Bush issued a major disaster declaration Tuesday for seven Oklahoma counties battered by the ice storm. Federal funds will now be available to reimburse state and local governments for cleanup and infrastructure repairs.
The two-day storm caused 27 deaths, the state Medical Examiner's office said. Of those, 16 perished in traffic accidents, eight in fires, two from carbon monoxide fumes and one from hypothermia.
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Immediately after the storm, half a million homes and businesses were without power in Oklahoma.
Crews working 13-hour shifts had reduced that number to fewer than 40,000 by Wednesday morning.
Utility officials said power cannot be restored to some structures until the customers repair damage to connections where electrical service enters a home or business.
"We're out here in la-la land, and we're the last ones to be taken care of," said Ronnie Driscoll. He and his wife have been surviving with a gas stove, flashlights and battery-operated TV, but their patience is wearing thin.
"Monday was the first time we saw anybody up here," Driscoll said. "No electrician has been here -- period."
Kathy Calico, a spokeswoman for Verdigris Valley Electric Cooperative, said she understood the frustrations of the residents without power, and that the company's goal is to restore service to 99 percent of its customers by next Tuesday.
"If we have to, we'll work Christmas Eve and part of Christmas Day, whatever we have to do," she said.
The storm broke about 1,700 power poles in the company's service area, initially knocking out electricity to as many as 14,000 customers, Calico said.
"We're not used to telling our members they're going to be out a day, and we're on day 10," she said. "The damage to the system is just huge."
Oklahoma was hardest hit by the storm that struck the Midwest and Northeast last week. In Kansas, where six deaths were blamed on the storm, about 24,000 customers remained without power Tuesday. See storm damage from Midwest to Northeast »
While the Plains struggled to put power back on, a swath of the country from the Great Lakes to New England dug out from a weekend storm that dumped 18 inches of snow in some places. At least eight traffic deaths were reported in the region.