Cleveland, OH
FirstEnergy, CPP releases updated restoration plans, over 24K without power
CLEVELAND, Ohio (WOIO) – FirstEnergy said power should be restored earlier than its original August 14 date in a release Sunday afternoon and Cleveland Public Power announced that 97% of customers have been restored.
RELATED STORY: Severe weather cancels events and topples trees, powerlines in Northeast Ohio
In the First Energy release, it shared that thanks to the over 7,500 storm responders, customers can expect power restoration much sooner, and a small number of customers in areas with more extensive damage may extend further into the week.
Similarly, CPP said there are currently 1,020 customers without service and more than 150 CPP line workers, transmission and distribution inspectors, line clearance workers and support staff working on restoration efforts.
Over 24 thousand people remain in the dark Sunday afternoon in what power companies are calling a ‘historic’ outage following Tuesday’s storms.
FirstEnergy: 2,500+ crews coming to NE Ohio to assist in ‘historic’ outage, over 24K powerless
Below is a list of the times that FirstEnergy customers can expect power:
Ashtabula County
Colebrook Township Sunday, Aug. 11 by 11 p.m.
Orwell Sunday, Aug. 11 by 11 p.m.
Orwell Township Sunday, Aug. 11 by 11 p.m.
Windsor Township Sunday, Aug. 11 by 11 p.m.
Cuyahoga County
Bay Village Monday, Aug. 12 by 4 p.m.
Beachwood Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 p.m.
Bratenahl Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 p.m.
Brook Park Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 p.m.
Brooklyn Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 p.m.
Brooklyn Heights Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 p.m.
Cleveland Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 p.m.
Cuyahoga Heights Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 p.m.
Euclid Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 p.m.
Fairview Park Monday, Aug. 12 by 4 p.m.
Gates Mills Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 p.m.
Highland Heights Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 p.m.
Hunting Valley Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 p.m.
Lakewood Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 p.m.
Linndale Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 p.m.
Lyndhurst Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 p.m.
Mayfield Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 p.m.
Mayfield Heights Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 p.m.
Newburgh Heights Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 p.m.
North Olmsted Monday, Aug. 12 by 4 p.m.
Olmsted Falls Monday, Aug. 12 by 4 p.m.
Olmsted Township Monday, Aug. 12 by 4 p.m.
Pepper Pike Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 p.m.
Richmond Heights Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 p.m.
Rocky River Monday, Aug. 12 by 4 p.m.
South Euclid Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 p.m.
University Heights Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 p.m.
Westlake Monday, Aug. 12 by 4 p.m.
Woodmere Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 p.m.
Geauga County
Aquilla Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 a.m.
Burton Sunday, Aug. 11 by 11 p.m.
Burton Township Sunday, Aug. 11 by 11 p.m.
Chardon Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 a.m.
Chardon Township Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 a.m.
Chester Township Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 a.m.
Claridon Township Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 a.m.
Hambden Township Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 a.m.
Huntsburg Township Sunday, Aug. 11 by 11 p.m.
Middlefield Township Sunday, Aug. 11 by 11 p.m.
Munson Township Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 a.m.
Newbury Township Sunday, Aug. 11 by 11 p.m.
Lake County
Concord Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 a.m.
Concord Township Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 a.m.
Eastlake Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 p.m.
Fairport Harbor Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 a.m.
Grand River Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 a.m.
Kirtland Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 a.m.
Kirtland Hills Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 a.m.
Lakeline Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 p.m.
Leroy Township Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 a.m.
Mentor Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 a.m.
Mentor on the Lake Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 a.m.
North Perry Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 a.m.
Painesville Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 a.m.
Painesville Township Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 a.m.
Perry Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 a.m.
Perry Township Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 a.m.
Timberlake Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 p.m.
Waite Hill Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 a.m.
Wickliffe Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 p.m.
Willoughby Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 p.m.
Willoughby Hills Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 p.m.
Willowick Monday, Aug. 12 by 11 p.m.
Lorain County
Avon Monday, Aug. 12 by 4 p.m.
Avon Lake Monday, Aug. 12 by 4 p.m.
The release said if your community is not listed below, please log into your account at firstenergycorp.com or text STAT to 544487 if you are registered for text alerts to get your specific outage ETR.
As of 10:30 a.m. Sunday, 36,804 FirstEnergy customers in Northeast Ohio are without power. For reference, as of approximately 4:15 a.m. Thursday, Aug. 8, 273,354 customers were without power.
Over 2,500 crews are also coming into Northeast Ohio from other states to assist in the outages.
| Contractors from the following states: | Mutual assistance from the following utilities: |
|---|---|
| Ohio | AEP Ohio |
| Pennsylvania | AEP Kentucky |
| Michigan | AEP Indiana |
| Indiana | AEP Appalachain Power – West Virginia |
| Illinois | ComEd – Illinois |
| New York | Duquesne Light – Pennsylvania |
| Virginia | AES Indiana |
| Tennessee | |
| Georgia | |
| Alabama | |
| Florida |
FirstEnergy issued the following statement Thursday morning:
You can find the current number of outages for FirstEnergy customers by clicking here.
Cleveland Public Power also issued a statement Sunday afternoon:
That same release shared that Collinwood, Old Brooklyn and East Glenville where primary wires are still down are the areas of concentration for crews and contractors.
Click here to view the outage map for Cleveland Public Power.
Here are the counties with the most outages for FirstEnergy customers as of 3:30 p.m. Sunday
- CUYAHOGA -15,468
- GEAUGA – 3,761
- LAKE – 3,161
- LORAIN – 718
- PORTAGE- 33
Copyright 2024 WOIO. All rights reserved.
Cleveland, OH
Driver crashes into gas line, causing evacuations in Cleveland neighborhood
CLEVELAND, Ohio (WOIO) – A driver crashed into a fence and struck a high-pressure gas line, creating a risk of explosion, on Thursday morning.
Police and firefighters evacuated a total of five homes until Enbridge crews turned off the gas to the street. Those who evacuated have since returned home.
This happened around 7 a.m. Thursday in the area of W. 88th Street and Maywood Avenue. Enbridge officials say when the driver hit the gas line it started leaking.
The gas was turned off around 8:15 a.m., but Enbridge said no one has been without gas.
Enbridge told 19 News that the damage to the station is significant, and they anticipate it to take at least five more hours, as of 3 p.m., as employees work in the cold conditions.
One woman in the car was transported to the hospital. There were no other injuries.
Below is a statement from Enbridge on the repairs:
This is a developing story. Return to 19 News for updates.
Copyright 2026 WOIO. All rights reserved.
Cleveland, OH
Northeast Ohio cities issue Snow Emergency Parking Bans for Thursday
CLEVELAND — Some northeast Ohio cities have issued Snow Emergency Parking Bans for Thursday as much of the region is under a Lake Effect Snow Warning.
Lake-enhanced and lake-effect snow will persist through the Thursday morning commute and gradually taper off before the evening commute in most spots. The Cleveland area could get up to 5 to 7 inches of snow.
The City of Cleveland said its Snow Emergency Parking Ban will be in effect from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.
As a result, stopping, standing or parking cars will be restricted and prohibited on city streets with posted red and white signs. Parking is prohibited on these Snow Emergency streets, which are necessary for transportation, medical care, police protection and more.
“Vehicles left parked in the roadway prevent snowplows from clearing streets, which can make driving down these streets impossible. Resulting bottlenecks and gridlock can hamper response by emergency vehicles,” the City of Cleveland stated in a previous release, explaining the parking ban. “For this reason, citizens are encouraged to avoid parking vehicles on all city streets to allow snowplows sufficient time to remove snow and ice from the roads. Vehicles in violation are subject to citation and towing.”
The city also said waste collection will be delayed a day.
Here is the list of streets under the Snow Emergency Parking Ban:
The City of Lorain also issued an emergency parking ban, effective immediately, Thursday morning. The city said it will be in effect until further notice.
The city said all cars parked on the roadway during the ban may be ticketed and/or towed to allow crews to clear the roads.
Citing an ordinance, the city said, “parking is prohibited on all city streets, avenues, boulevards, parkways or highways within the city limits, except at addresses without a dedicated driveway.”
For more information, residents can contact the City of Lorain Street Department by calling 440-204-2550.
Cleveland, OH
In the Wake of ICE Shooting, Protests in Ohio, Preparation for More Raids
Thousands of protesters turned out across Ohio on Saturday, days after an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent in Minneapolis shot a protester there in the face, killing her. As the protests took place, advocates worked to organize responses to future ICE actions in the Buckeye State.
In Columbus, people turned out at the intersection of North Broadway and High Street, carrying signs and chanting condemnations of the shooting.
A Columbus police officer said that Saturday protests there are routine. But where they normally draw crowds numbering in the dozens, he estimated Saturday’s to be about 300.
Lynn Tramonte, founder of the Ohio Immigrant Alliance, said that large crowds also turned out to protest in Cleveland, Akron, and Youngstown.
They were protesting a masked ICE agent’s shooting of 37-year-old Renee Nicole Good. Good was behind the wheel of her SUV when the agent, Jonathan E. Ross, shot her from point-blank range.
Just after the shooting, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and later President Donald Trump claimed that Good was trying to run over the masked agent.
A New York Times analysis contradicted that claim. It displayed video evidence showing that Good was steering her vehicle away from the agent when he shot her.
The killing comes after an ICE supervisor in Ohio was accused last month of multiple violent attacks against his much-younger, noncitizen partner. They also follow the sentencing last year of another Ohio officer who extorted sex from a vulnerable immigrant who was in his care.
In Columbus, people lined the wet streets, carrying signs that said things like “Ice Out,” and “No Kings, No Thugs. Stop the Chaos, Cruelty, Corruption.”
Many passing vehicles honked their horns in support of the protest. But one man driving a pickup pulled up, rolled down his window and said, “Kill them all.” Asked who he wanted to see killed, he repeated himself, rolled up his window and drove off.
Many others, however, say they want to defend immigrants and others ICE is targeting.
Izetta Thomas is a member of the Columbus Education and Justice Coalition. The group works for equity and justice in general. But it started working to protect immigrants after the Trump administration last year started rounding up people by the thousands.
“I don’t think our group came to the issue, the issue came to us,” Thomas said.
“We have a number of students and parents and neighbors in Columbus whose freedoms and rights are at risk, who are being terrorized by military raids that are coming into our city and neighborhoods. Anything that happens in or outside the school doors is our business. And anything that happens in our neighborhoods impacts our students’ lives.”
Tramonte said that people across Ohio can call her group’s hotline — 419-777-HELP (4357) — to find groups near them that react to ICE raids and assist immigrants in other ways. She said people in Central Ohio can also reach out to the Community Response Hub.
Tramonte was asked if there were resources instructing citizens on how they can monitor and protest ongoing ICE operations legally and safely. She said the SALUTE system lays out the details observers should take down, and local groups know how to go about doing it.
But last week’s shooting in Minneapolis illustrates the risks, Tramonte said.
“The ‘safely’ part is where I’m getting caught up,” she said. “Because it’s supposed to be safe, but we’re seeing federal law enforcement act in ways that if local police acted that way, they wouldn’t be able to get away with it. Pulling people out of cars, walking up and shooting people in the face… ‘Safely’ the part where I’m getting hung up.”
Meanwhile, some parents are frustrated with the way Dublin City Schools dealt with ICE detentions near at least one of its campuses on the last day before Christmas break.
They were part of an operation that resulted in more than 280 detentions in Central Ohio that week.
At least two took place about a tenth of a mile from Dublin-Scioto High School, and at least one student was reportedly detained.
Courtney O’Neil’s son is a freshman at the school. When she heard about the ICE arrests, she started calling around to Dublin schools to find out how widespread they were
“They denied it. They said this is a rumor. It’s not true. They’re not around our schools,” O’Neil said. “They said if it did happen, they had plenty of staff to see that students could get home safely.”
She said it was plain to her that those assurances were hollow.
“They’re targeting the parents,” she said of ICE. “They’re targeting the kids (who are) just trying to go to the schools and get an education.”
Asked to comment, Dublin City Schools spokeswoman Cassie Dietrich referred to a written statement the district issued on Dec. 22.
“No immigration enforcement officials were on Dublin City Schools property, no officials were inside our schools, and at this time, Dublin City Schools is not aware of any students being detained,” it said.
It added, “Through our communication with the Dublin Police Department, we have been informed that the only confirmed activity involved a traffic stop at the corner of Emerald Parkway and Hard Road, which was not connected to Dublin City Schools. Dublin Police have also shared that they did not participate in or direct any federal immigration enforcement related to this situation.”
Thomas, of the Columbus Education and Justice Coalition, said that her group, at least, would work to help immigrant schoolchildren and others.
“We’re working to protect our students and families,” she said. “It’s causing trauma. There are folks who are afraid to go to school. There are folks who are afraid to go to work. They are afraid of the authoritarian control that is being advanced by this administration. So we’re working together to do what neighbors do, and that is keep one another safe.”
Originally published by the Ohio Capital Journal. Republished here with permission.
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