Travis Parazoo, a 2007 graduate of Scio
High School, recently returned from spending 13 days on the East
Coast, weathering Hurricane Sandy and helping restore power to
residents in Connecticut and keeping roads clear for emergency
vehicles. “I got the word that they needed a lot of linemen,”
Parazoo said the week after his return.
A member of 659 Local, Parazoo trained
in Wyoming, married and then returned to Oregon, taking a job in the
Roseburg area. Soon after, he was laid off, going on the union's out
of work list. Leading up to Hurricane Sandy, Parazoo got a phone call
from a Hubbard, Oregon company saying workers were needed to head to
the East Coast before the powerful storm hit the area. Parazoo said
yes. “I quit that afternoon and flew out two days later.” He flew
from Portland to Seattle and then on to Boston. Almost the entire
plane was filled with linemen, including some from Canada, headed to
help where they could. From there, they were bussed through
Massachusetts to Connecticut.
Contracted by Connecticut Light &
Power, Parazoo and the other linemen spent their first day being
tested on a variety of machinery so the company would be prepared in
advance of the storm. Parazoo was one of the linemen assigned to
Haddem, Connecticut. “There was a line crew and a tree crew,”
Parazoo said, adding, “We were there to take care of the town.”
Driving toward the coast where Haddem
is located, Parazoo and his partner were in their truck when the
storm came ashore. “The sky darkened, the wind picked up,” he
said. “We just had to hang on and wait for stuff to go down.”
Haddem is located less than a half hour drive from the Atlantic
Ocean.
The crew's duties first and foremost
was what was called “cut and clear,” meaning the crews were to
make sure one lane on all roads remained open for emergency vehicles.
“It was quite an experience.” One of the sights Parazoo witnessed
was when a tree that he estimated was 30 inches in diameter at the
top snapped in half “like a twig” as the hurricane roared through
the area. “It was a scary deal.”
After Sandy passed and the crews
concluded their cut and clear work, Parazoo said they set to
restoring power. “We worked 16/8,” meaning the crews worked 16
hours and had eight hours off. The linemen had no idea how long they
would be there. All they knew, said Parazoo, was they they would work
“for as long as it took.” In Parazoo's case, that meant 13 days.
“The people were great,” he said of
those he helped. He noted that on Halloween people brought them candy
and even bags of food. “One lady brought us a whole gallon of
coffee and Dunkin Donuts.” Most people were very appreciative,
especially once their power was restored. He said it was tough to see
cardboard signs on some streets asking when their power would be
restored.
At the peak of the outages, Parazoo
said over 650,000 people in Connecticut were without power. When he
left last week, less than 500 people were still awaiting the return
of their power. In all, Parazoo and his partner put over 1200 miles
on their truck, moving from Connecticut to New York and
Massachusetts.
He said seeing the area, even with the
destruction, was “very cool.” One thing he said he could do
without was the hurricane. “It makes me appreciate what we don't
have to go through.”
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