More winds are expected to hit the Puget Sound region on Friday, but they won’t be as strong as the ones that blew through Tuesday night, according to the National Weather Service.
The National Weather Service reports two rounds of winds will hit Western Washington from early Friday morning to 10 p.m. Friday evening, with gusts up to 35-40 mph on the Pacific Coast, Strait of Juan de Fuca and from Admiralty Inlet north to the Canadian border.
The agency advises people to secure loose items outside and to prepare for the potential for additional power outages.
More than 270,000 people in the region were still without power Thursday after Tuesday evening’s “bomb cyclone.” At least two people – one in a Bellevue house, the other in a homeless encampment in Lynnwood – died because of falling trees on Tuesday. The storm caused roads and schools to close due to lost power, fallen trees and power lines blocking roads.
Puget Sound Energy reported more than 269,000 customers were without power Thursday morning. The utility reported that customers in Pierce and Thurston counties are expected to have power restored today; customers in Whatcom, Skagit, Island and Kitsap counties are expected to have power restored by 6 p.m. on Friday. The majority of customers in east King County, which the utility says was the hardest hit of its regions, are expected to have power restored by noon on Saturday. At the outage’s peak, more than 595,000 customers were without power after Tuesday’s storm.
Seattle City Light, which provides power for Seattle, Shoreline, Burien, Normandy Park and Tukwila, reported between 9,000 customers were still without power on Thursday morning. The estimated restoration time for most areas was by midnight Thursday. At the outage’s peak, more than 100,000 Seattle City Light customers were without electricity.