A pre-announced power shut-down is a bit like an open-book disaster exam.
If a city wasn't prepared for a blackout, its going to be a lot worse after a major earthquake (or other catastrophe) hits.



PG&E CEO Bill Johnson admitted during a Thursday evening press conference that the utility thoroughly botched its Public Safety Power Shutoff, apologizing to customers.
[...]
Johnson also apologized for all the technical problems with the PG&E website and promised to get them right next time.

“Our website crashed several times. Our maps are inconsistent and maybe in correct. Our call centers were overloaded,” said Johnson. “To put it simply, we were not adequately prepared to support the operational event.”



https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2019/10/11/pge-shut-down-power-too-many-internet-users-shut-down-its-website/
[...]
PG&E says the site was never completely inaccessible, but that it was slow to load amid heavy traffic.

PG&E spokesman Paul Doherty said the utility doubled its server capacity in advance of the outages but that the traffic levels were eight times what PG&E expected and slowed the site significantly. He said he did not know exactly how many people had tried to visit the site.

Doherty said the utility made efforts to inform affected customers over email, text and phone calls so they would know whether they were likely to be in the outage zone. The company says it has since addressed the issues with its website.
[...]

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