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Getting the family together for Thanksgiving dinner? Take some time to talk about emergency preparedness.
Read MoreEugene Water & Electric Board and contract line crews made significant progress restoring power overnight Monday and into Tuesday, with more than 6,300 customers returned to service. As of 4:30 p.m. Tuesday, there are about 7,600 EWEB customers without service, down from more than 14,000 without power at 5 p.m. Monday.
Read MoreGetting the family together for Thanksgiving dinner? Take some time to talk about emergency preparedness.
Read MoreAll information presented on this map is approximate and subject to change. While we do our best to ensure the quality of the information, EWEB makes no guarantee as to its accuracy, completeness or timeliness. The outage locations are generalized to protect customer privacy and estimated restoration times are estimates only. We can't guarantee that power will be restored to your home or business within the time frame displayed.
Read MoreAll information presented on this map is approximate and subject to change. While we do our best to ensure the quality of the information, EWEB makes no guarantee as to its accuracy, completeness or timeliness. The outage locations are generalized to protect customer privacy and estimated restoration times are estimates only. We can't guarantee that power will be restored to your home or business within the time frame displayed.
Read MoreOur Electric Operations crews are making steady progress on improving the local power grid's reliability, and have completed more than half of a series of the planned resiliency projects throughout the Eugene service area this year.
Read MoreFollowing the 2016 ice storm, we applied for grant funding from the Federal Emergency Management Agency to make resiliency improvements to our electric system to reduce the frequency and duration of storm-related outages in several areas prone to storm damage. The agency has thus far approved 15 of the 16 proposed reliability projects, and will fund 75 percent of the cost, estimated to be about $3 million. The final project should be approved later this spring.
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