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These folks need help, as do people in other areas afflicted by the disasters noted above. A prayer and a donation would be in order. Samaritan's Purse is responding and maybe some other organizations too.
There is another winter storm brewing for the southeast US.

Sliger said people who were prepared to manage a couple of days without power can’t go much longer without help.

“They’re cold, they don’t have power, they don’t have heat, they’re out of propane, they’re out of wood, they’re out of kerosene for their kerosene heaters,” she said. “They have no food, they have no additional fuel for their alternative heating sources, so they’re needing out.”

In northeast Mississippi, emergency managers in Alcorn County were also receiving “calls of desperation” from people running out of food, water, medication and other supplies, said Evan Gibens, the emergency agency’s director. He said dispatchers who have been sleeping at work since Friday have fielded more than 2,000 calls.

“We are doing everything we possibly can,” said Gibens, noting 200 people were staying at a local arena being used as a warming shelter.

More than 100,000 outages remained in Nashville, Tennessee, where downed trees and snapped power lines blocked access to some areas. Utility workers will need at least the weekend, if not longer, to finish restoring power, said Brent Baker, a Nashville Electric Service vice president
 
These folks need help, as do people in other areas afflicted by the disasters noted above. A prayer and a donation would be in order. Samaritan's Purse is responding and maybe some other organizations too.
There is another winter storm brewing for the southeast US.
It seems as though the devastation in Tennessee is being made intentionally worse by the leadership in Nashville and the ineptness at Nashville Electric Service. Two stories about the madness going on there:


Nashville Electric Service is facing criticism after multiple union members and contractors report the utility refused help from available linemen, as more than 100,000 outages remain in freezing temperatures throughout the Nashville area.

Two members of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, who asked to remain unnamed, say NES declined offers of assistance from multiple union crews, potentially opting for less expensive contractors instead.

“I’ve had a lot of people reach out trying to come to Nashville to help restore power,” the union member said. “They keep getting the same answer- that NES is full and doesn’t need help... I just don’t think they want to pay the union rates.”

FOX 17 News uncovered on Monday, the third day after the storm, NES began work with significantly fewer linemen in the field (less than 300) than neighboring Middle Tennessee Electric, which had 200,000 fewer outages at the storm's peak- 150 fewer linemen.

As of Tuesday, NES reported some 700 linemen in the field.

With potentially a quarter of a million people without power in Nashville, some argue additional crews are urgently needed to restore power- and heat- during dangerously cold conditions, regardless of the company or union.

Another IBEW member from out-of-state, who asked not to be identified, said thousands of union linemen were potentially available after getting released from North Carolina, where they were originially staged, which didn't suffer as intense a storm.

He said he was part of roughly 18,000 linemen who were then sent home, or to other areas. But he said Nashville appeared not to be on that list. Instead, he is now working with Middle Tennessee Electric, which has significantly fewer outages than NES.

“Why are we 10 minutes down the road with 2,000 outages when we could be 15 minutes to Nashville and help out with more than 200 broken poles?” he said. “Union or non-union, they could bring in way more people... You think they would put all hands on deck, and flood that city with linemen and just get everything turned on as fast as they can."

FOX 17 News asked the worker if he believed 700 lineworkers was enough?

"That's no not at all not even close. I'm sorry... I think a minimum of 2,000... I mean, North Carolina had 18,000 of a stage."

NES was asked directly during a press briefing Tuesday, whether it had refused assistance.

“As far as we know, no,” NES representative Brent Baker said. “We are sticking to the path of bringing on the crews that we have partnered with and through the mutual aid... NES currently has crews from Florida, Maryland, Kentucky, Indiana, Ohio, Mississippi and states across the United States and especially the region. As we continue to scale up and grow the workforce, we were accepting workforce from all of those agreements. We had already mutual aid as a more speedy way to get some of our folks here, as well as the contracts we already had. So we had people en route."

FOX 17 News' Kelly Avellino emailed NES asking which crews, if any, had been turned away, why that decision was made, and whether unions were involved. We haven't received a direct response, as of this publication.

Meanwhile, a community group has launched a petition calling on NES to hire any available linemen, saying more workers are needed than the approximately 700 currently deployed.

“People are already in temperatures in the 30s, and it’s going to be single digits again,” said Cecilia Prado of the Nashville People Power Committee. “People are going to die.”

A national representative for IBEW responded to Fox 17 News' inquiry in an email after two days of researching the issue, "Sounds like there are a bunch of our folks on the way or there working already now, but I’m not able to confirm numbers," said Matt Spence.

FOX 17 News has also received numerous comments on social media from viewers reporting similar accounts of NES allegedly declining help from contractors and union crews. We also reached out to all NES Board members, but have not yet heard back.

Reporter Slams Nashville Electric Service, Democratic Leadership in Nashville Power Crisis​

January 28, 2026 Kaitlin Housler

Tom Pappert, lead reporter at The Tennessee Star, criticized the handling of Nashville’s recent ice storm, highlighting what he described as systemic mismanagement by city officials and the Nashville Electric Service (NES) board.

More than 108,000 NES customers remained without power Wednesday morning after an ice storm swept through the region over the weekend. The utility company has since faced criticism after multiple union members and contractors reported that NES declined offers of assistance from available linemen to restore service.

Two members of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, who spoke anonymously to Fox 17, claimed that NES “declined offers of assistance from multiple union crews, potentially opting for less expensive contractors instead.”

In comparison, other Middle Tennessee electric companies have reported far fewer outages. Middle Tennessee Electric, which serves more than 359,000 customers, reported only 284 outages at noon on Wednesday.

On Wednesday’s edition of The Michael Patrick Leahy Show, Pappert attributed much of the prolonged outage to the NES board’s lack of operational experience.

He pointed out that board members, many of whom were politically appointed, “None of them particularly seem to have a lot of expertise in the field.”

Pappert also criticized NES’s communication with residents, calling the utility’s text alerts telling residents to utilize warming centers “patronizing.”

“If it’s freezing and you don’t have heat and you don’t have electricity, do you really need a municipally-owned power company… to let you know that? It’s insulting,” he said.

Pappert went on to call for NES to accept outside assistance in restoring power across Nashville.

“They need to invite these folks from Middle Tennessee Electric and other utilities nearby and say, this is an all-hands-on-deck situation. Please bail us out,” he said. “After all, Democrats are good at accepting bailouts.”

Pappert framed the situation as part of a broader pattern of mismanagement in cities run by Democrats, warning that political loyalty and political correctness often outweigh expertise in critical municipal roles.

“It turns out that the price you pay for Democrat mismanagement is weeks in the dark…This is really what anybody in any Democrat city has to look forward to… you’re going to have mismanagement that can cost lives,” he said, though he noted that Tennessee communities are generally well-prepared to handle crises through neighborly support.

“Fortunately, I think the people of Tennessee are very well prepared for things like this. You have neighbors that take care of each other, but in other states this could be tragic,” Pappert added.
 
The neighborhood behind me still doesn't have power since Sunday night when I think a transformer blew. I heard a loud bang and my electricity went out but fortunately came back on within a minute. Sunday was nerve wracking having electricity and not knowing if I was next. Went out to Kroger yesterday morning. Several large reach in coolers were completely empty. Not one item. Very little to choose from. I got a gluten free pepperoni pizza and some sushi, which was freshly made. I'm finally returning to work this afternoon but some of our employees still don't have power. Another arctic blast is on the way.
 

On the Pulse with Silki providing a closer look (+ alot commentary) on the Niscemi Landslide, Sicily, Italy. In her latest video (not attached) she covers more on the nature of rotational landslide believed to be taking place at Niscemi.


I have NEVER seen anything like this ! Niscemi under EVACUATION and CUT OFF. Situation is DRAMATIC according to Officials, the Niscemi Landslide is moving fast ! Sicily under Emergency !The Images we get from Sicily are heartbreaking ! But also Sardinia and more islands in the Mediterranean are devastated ! Italy in Emergency. Waves like a gigantic Tsunami hit the coast of Sicily, Mount Etna volcano's home. Cyclone Harry is responsible for the storm surge and destruction.
 
The neighborhood behind me still doesn't have power since Sunday night when I think a transformer blew. I heard a loud bang and my electricity went out but fortunately came back on within a minute. Sunday was nerve wracking having electricity and not knowing if I was next. Went out to Kroger yesterday morning. Several large reach in coolers were completely empty. Not one item. Very little to choose from. I got a gluten free pepperoni pizza and some sushi, which was freshly made. I'm finally returning to work this afternoon but some of our employees still don't have power. Another arctic blast is on the way.
My family over in Tennessee still has no power, they are staying with a friend who has a generator thankfully but couldn't bring their cats with them :( School is closed all week and remains to be seen if power comes back on in the small town by next week. Sucks to be powerless to help. Needless to say, my sister has realized the need to have backup power.
 
My family over in Tennessee still has no power, they are staying with a friend who has a generator thankfully but couldn't bring their cats with them :( School is closed all week and remains to be seen if power comes back on in the small town by next week. Sucks to be powerless to help. Needless to say, my sister has realized the need to have backup power.
The good thing is the TN National Guard is assisting in the efforts to clear downed trees and powerlines.

 
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