Cleaning crew blamed for RDU power outage
A sloppy cleaning crew was the cause of an hours-long power outage Friday at Raleigh-Durham International Airport that caused dozens of flight delays and cancellations and left stranded passengers angry and frustrated.
Posted — UpdatedThe outage, which affected only Terminal 2, was reported shortly after 4 a.m., and power wasn't fully restored until 11:30 a.m.
RDU spokeswoman Crystal Feldman said a large amount of water spilled by a cleaning crew seeped through a floor and onto an electrical box, tripping the system for Concourse C.
There was enough power in Terminal 2 to keep the lights on, but the outage affected numerous other systems essential for operations, from ticketing to security, leaving airport staff to conduct many operations manually.
"The airlines are manually checking people in. We were manually carrying bags downstairs to go through security," Feldman said. "TSA was manually screening people."
Officials had to wait for a specialized contractor to repair the damage and restore power, leaving hundreds of passengers waiting for hours inside Terminal 2. That terminal serves all airlines except Southwest.
"There is a lot of people griping in there, and the lines are around the corner – it is backed up," traveler Katrina Machicote said.
By 7 a.m., contractors were at the airport working on repairs, and systems started coming back online within an hour.
Some airplanes in flight at the time of the outage had to be diverted to Charlotte Douglas International Airport. Other flights that hadn't left yet were canceled.
By mid-afternoon, 19 departures and 21 arrivals had been canceled, and 14 departures and nine arrivals were delayed.
A woman whose flight was originally scheduled for 7 a.m. didn't know what to think.
"I'm feeling anxious [and] frustrated, although I know it's nobody's fault," she said.
"Once I checked in, they had already canceled that flight and pushed me to a 1:55 [p.m.] flight,” Ocampo said. "I feel bad for all the people that have funerals and weddings.”
"What type of crap is that?" she said of her disrupted itinerary. "I am just very upset. ... Now I have to drive, like, 2½ hours, and I don’t know North Carolina like that."
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