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CAYCE, S.C. (Aug. 7, 2024) – Tropical Storm Debby continued to cause outages in South Carolina – primarily along the coast – where saturated soil, falling trees and gusty winds brought down power poles and lines overnight. Dominion Energy urges customers to stay safe and prepare for additional rainfall, flooding and the potential for more outages as the storm maintains its slow crawl across the state.
Approximately 2,000 Dominion Energy employees as well as crew members and contract resources from out of state – including Georgia, Florida, Kentucky and West Virginia – are supporting storm response.
“Our family of employees have once again risen to meet the relentless bands of winds and rain that have accompanied Debby,” said Keller Kissam, president of Dominion Energy South Carolina. “Knowing this extreme weather event is not yet over, we will continue to respond to our customers’ needs in a vigilant and safe manner.”
In addition to strategically staging and dispatching resources, Dominion Energy continues to monitor Lake Murray’s water level and make adjustments as needed to ensure the safe operation of the dam.
Dominion Energy has also contacted White Cross customers with electrical medical equipment in their home. During a major storm or threat of a storm, the company proactively notifies its White Cross customers so they can make plans to sustain their equipment should an outage occur.
Tips for customers to stay safe and be informed:
About Dominion Energy
More than 4.5 million customers in 13 states energize their homes and businesses with electricity or natural gas from Dominion Energy (NYSE: D), headquartered in Richmond, Va. The company is committed to providing reliable, affordable, and increasingly clean energy every day and to achieving Net Zero emissions by 2050. Please visit DominionEnergy.com to learn more.
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