Huge power outage plunges Manhattan into darkness
Updated | By AFP
A power outage gripped New York's Manhattan on Saturday, sending Broadway theaters plunging into darkness, subways grinding to a halt and flicking off billboards in Times Square.
About 42,000 customers lost electricity in the early evening, according to the Con Edison utility.
Mayor Bill de Blasio said on Twitter that the outage was caused by a "manhole fire," but later told CNN it was under investigation.
.@NYCEmergencyMgt is working with the NYPD, FDNY and city agencies to respond to power outages in Manhattan due to a manhole fire earlier this evening. Disruption is significant.
— Mayor Bill de Blasio (@NYCMayor) July 14, 2019
We’ll have further updates soon — please follow @NotifyNYC.
"This appears to be something that just went wrong in the way that they transmit power from one part of the city to another to address demand," de Blasio said.
The blackout is between W 42nd St and 72nd St, from the Hudson River to as far as 5th Ave. NYPD has confirmed that there’s no foul play. This was a mechanical issue. NYPD & FDNY are currently responding to people with the most urgent needs, especially those stuck in elevators.
— Mayor Bill de Blasio (@NYCMayor) July 14, 2019
On social media, dozens of users posted photos of the city bathed in darkness.
....and then this happened#ManhattanBlackout pic.twitter.com/Dr3fHr8fQx
— Rohit Prasad (@CynicsIView) July 14, 2019
Only cell phones and flashlights illuminating the New Yorker building tonight #blackout #ManhattanBlackout pic.twitter.com/QTCYmrC07f
— Sam T (@SamTTweets) July 14, 2019
It's kindof peaceful #ManhattanBlackout pic.twitter.com/AEP9C2mAdG
— katherine♡ (@_soamazinq) July 14, 2019
"While Con Edison works to restore power in Manhattan, we encourage everyone to avoid below-ground subway stations," New York's Metropolitan Transportation Authority said on Twitter.
Firefighters said they were responding to numerous requests for help, particularly from people trapped in elevators.
New Yorkers took Saturday's outage in stride, with passersby standing in intersections to direct traffic and a disrupted Carnegie Hall concert continuing in the street.
The cut affected the western chunk of Manhattan, particularly the Hell's Kitchen neighborhood and the Broadway theater district.
It took place on the anniversary of the 1977 "Blackout" power cut that affected virtually the entirety of New York in the midst of an economic crisis.
Looting and vandalism then broke out, affecting more than a thousand businesses.
Twenty-five hours and several hundred arrests later, the lights came back on.
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