Royalton Police Chief Loretta Stalnaker, left, works with state workers and a local resident to clear Route 14 in Royalton on Nov. 27. Photo by James M. Patterson/Valley News

This article by Jared Pendak was initially published by the Valley News on Nov. 28.

[W]OODSTOCK โ€” Green Mountain Power crews are continuing efforts to restore power to thousands of homes and businesses across Vermont, but the utility now is warning that some customers may not regain electricity until the weekend.

More than 15,800 customers still were without power late Wednesday evening, according to the utility. GMP said most will have power restored by Friday night, โ€œbut some outages in the hardest-hit areas of Vermont may last into Saturday, or in some cases Sunday,โ€ the utility said in a news release on Wednesday evening.

The state, working with the American Red Cross, was opening emergency shelters, including at Hartford High School.

GMP crews, aided by outside contractors, have restored power to about 80,000 customers since heavy, wet snow hit the Twin States late Monday.

More than 2,200 new outages were reported by GMP over Tuesday night as snow and freezing temperatures continued.

โ€œThe damage is widespread; the conditions are still hazardous; we are still getting new outages,โ€ GMP President and CEO Mary Powell said. โ€œWe want our customers to know we are working hard, but given the severe damage over hundreds of miles, getting the job done could take days.โ€

Power in parts of Woodstock Village was restored on Tuesday, but other parts of town continue to be out. Many remained without power on Wednesday afternoon along Route 106 between Woodstock and South Woodstock as work crews โ€” including several from Holland Quebec Inc., which traveled from Sherbrooke, Quebec, to assist GMP in Woodstock โ€” scrambled to remove downed tree limbs, many of them strewn across wires.

Both the Woodstock Athletic Club and South Woodstock General Store were closed as a result of the outages, and many residents were coping with the loss of heat and water. As of late Wednesday night, more than 975 customers in Woodstock were still without electricity.

During lunchtime on Wednesday, Tim Gould ate a takeout burrito outside his Route 106 home while watching a Holland Quebec team finish cleaning up damage after a large poplar tree fell across the street from his house.

โ€œI imagine thatโ€™s what caused my outage,โ€ Gould said. โ€œI stayed at a friendโ€™s last night. Weโ€™ll have to see about tonight.โ€

In South Woodstock, farmer Tina Tuckerman and retired veterinarian Lynn Murrell talked outside the building that houses the Country Store and post office. Both patrons said they were able to access their mailboxes in the dark.

Tuckerman was making the best of her available resources at the homestead.

โ€œWe have a generator, but we have it going in the barn right now,โ€ Tuckerman said. โ€œThat means the house is cold.โ€

Murrell, meanwhile, said he was heating his house with a woodstove, as was South Woodstock resident Ellen Lefever.

โ€œI slept in front of mine last night,โ€ Lefever said.

Massage therapist Joe DiNatale, whose home is on Linden Hill, parallel to Route 106 near the village, wasnโ€™t as fortunate. For 30 years, he maintained a woodstove at home, he said, but had it removed in favor of an electrically fired pellet stove before this year.

โ€œUp until yesterday, I thought it was the best thing I ever did,โ€ DiNatale said while relaxing inside Mon Vert Cafe downtown. โ€œNow Iโ€™m seriously considering getting a battery backup.โ€

DiNatale, who said heโ€™d stayed at his daughterโ€™s home in West Woodstock on Tuesday night, planned to stay at another relativeโ€™s on Wednesday. GMP has informed DiNatale he may be without power until Saturday, he said.

โ€œI feel like Iโ€™m homeless,โ€ DiNatale said. โ€œI want to cook food, sleep in my bed and take a shower, but I canโ€™t.โ€

Meanwhile, 608 GMP customers in Barnard โ€” 67 percent in that town โ€” were without power as of late Wednesday night.

To help residents in need cope with the cold, Woodstock planned to open its recreation center as a warming facility at 3 p.m. on Wednesday, emergency services personnel said. And the New Hampshire/Vermont region of the American Red Cross planned to open emergency shelters at Hartford High School and Barre Auditorium at 6 p.m. on Wednesday. Green Mountain Power still was reporting 419 outages in Hartland late Wednesday night, along with 12 in Hartford and two in Norwich.

Meanwhile, the Central Vermont-based Washington Electric Co-op still had nearly 3,200 outages, including 59 in Corinth and 24 in Vershire late Wednesday night.

Pomfret officials had prepared to open a warming shelter on Tuesday night, but nobody showed up. Instead, at least three residents stayed at area motels, according to Pomfret-Teago Fire Department Chief Kevin Rice.

The town still had about 275 reported outages, affecting more than 30 percent of the population, late Wednesday night. Earlier in the day, Rice said snow on the top of Wild Apple Road was up to his knees.

โ€œItโ€™s pretty rough up high,โ€ he said, adding that it was difficult to know, with power and phoneย lines down, whether at-risk residents needed help.

โ€œThe tough thing is itโ€™s hard to get communication,โ€ he said. โ€œI made a few trips around town to check on folks. Everyone seemed to be OK.โ€

The Valley News is the daily newspaper and website of the Upper Valley, online at www.vnews.com.