PG&E Offers Safety Tips for July 4 Holiday and Summer Heat Wave
Customers Should Prepare for Extreme Heat Conditions Across California
PG&E offers the following tips to help customers stay safe this Independence Day and throughout the summer:
Transformers, which distribute power to homes and businesses, need a period of time when they can cool down during a heat wave. This usually happens overnight when energy usage and temperatures drop. Heat events with sustained high overnight temperatures can put stress on transformers, causing them to fail. In case of heat-related outages, PG&E offers the following safety tips:
- Use battery-operated flashlights, and not candles, due to the risk of fire.
- Customers with generators should make sure they are properly installed by a licensed electrician in a well-ventilated area.
- Freeze plastic containers filled with water to make blocks of ice that can be placed in your refrigerator/freezer during an outage to prevent foods from spoiling.
- Customers can get updates on outages in their neighborhood through a variety of channels.
- Limit exposure to direct sunlight between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m., and wear a broad-spectrum sunscreen with a protection factor of at least 15. Reapply sunscreen often.
- Drink plenty of water and avoid alcohol or caffeine when temperatures are high.
- During hot weather, watch for signs of heat stroke—hot, red skin; changes in consciousness; rapid, weak pulse; rapid, shallow breathing. If it's suspected someone is suffering from heat stroke, call 9-1-1 and move the person to a cooler place and use cold towels to help lower their body temperature until help arrives.
- The safest way to enjoy fireworks is to attend a public fireworks show put on by professionals.
- Make yourself aware of your surroundings—stay clear of powerlines, structures, dry grass or flammable materials when shooting your own fireworks in areas approved by local regulations.
- If a firework strikes electric equipment or causes a powerline to come down, stay away, keep others away and immediately call 911 and PG&E at 1-800-743-5000. Always assume downed electric lines are energized and extremely dangerous. Never attempt to retrieve anything that is tangled in or near a powerline.
- Keep alert for local weather conditions. Check to see if any warning signs or flags are posted at beaches or parks you're visiting.
- Make sure everyone has proper skills to swim and keep an eye on young children and check flotation devices for leaks.
- Every child under 13 must wear a Coast Guard-approved life jacket when on a moving vessel that is 26 feet or less in length.
- Don't dive or jump into unfamiliar water. Shallow water or submerged trees or rocks could cause serious injury.
- Don't swim or play near a dam or powerhouse; these areas can have strong underwater currents, sudden water discharges, slippery surfaces and submerged hazards.
- Never use generators, propane heaters, barbecues or charcoal indoors due to carbon monoxide risks.
PG&E reminds customers to update their contact information at www.pge.com/mywildfirealerts. For more tips on how to safely navigate summer recreational activities, visit PG&E's Summer Safety Guide. The guide is also available in Chinese and Spanish.
PG&E does not anticipate initiating any Public Safety Power Shutoff events for the next week. Any power outages that occur during this hot spell are not PSPS events. Please visit www.pge.com/weather for the latest 7-day potential PSPS forecast.
Pacific Gas and Electric Company, a subsidiary of PG&E Corporation (NYSE:PCG), is a combined natural gas and electric utility serving more than 16 million people across 70,000 square miles in Northern and
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SOURCE Pacific Gas and Electric Company