By Robert McCool University of Kentucky Power outages can happen at any time. Damage to power lines due to severe weather is ...
Fix It Homestead on MSN
What to do in the first 10 minutes of a winter outage so you’re not making risky choices
The first ten minutes after the lights cut out on a freezing night are when you either quietly stabilize your home or set ...
Power outages can come from winter storms, heat waves, wildfires or a delivery driver backing into the power line by your house. But depending on how long they last or what the temperature is outside, ...
Snow in the forecast brings more than just a winter wonderland. It also increases the chance of power outages. Winter precipitation can cause power lines to sag, particularly if a snow-laden branch ...
Fix It Homestead on MSN
When power comes back after an outage, what to turn on in what order
When the lights flick back on after an outage, the real risk to your home often starts, not ends. The first few minutes of restored electricity are when surges, overloaded circuits, and stressed ...
Huron Daily Tribune on MSN
Michigan issues winter safety tips to protect residents during outages
What to toss, what to keep and who to trust after outages in Michigan; MDARD food rules and AG Nessel’s scam warnings you ...
Power outages can come from winter storms, heat waves, wildfires or a delivery driver backing into the power line by your house. But depending on how long they last or what the temperature is outside, ...
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