Power Outage in Rock Valley, IA
Last report: November 09, 2022
Here's How to Report Power Outage in Rock Valley
To report a power outage in Rock Valley, Iowa, located in Sioux County, please contact your local utility company using the following methods:
City of Orange City, IA
MidAmerican Energy Company
City of Sioux Center
City of Hawarden, IA
Alliant Energy
Western Area Power Administration
North West Rural Electric Coop
Lyon Rural Electric Coop
Contacts listed above can be used to report power outages in the following ZIP codes: 51247.
Recent Weather Related Causes of Power Outages in Sioux County
Thunderstorm Wind. Several power lines were downed by thunderstorm wind gusts.
September 17, 2021
Thunderstorm Wind. Six to nine inch diameter tree limbs taken down with power outages in Rock Valley. Property damage costs are rough estimates.
June 21, 2020
Thunderstorm Wind. Three power poles blown over and power lines down.
July 17, 2019
Ice Storm. Ice accumulated to one-quarter to one-third inch, mainly across the northern half of the county, and mainly from late evening on April 10 through early morning April 11. As winds increased early April 11 with gusts reaching 45 to 50 mph at times, power poles and transmission lines bore the brunt of the worst conditions. Twenty power transmission poles were snapped between Sioux Center and Orange City due to the weight of the ice accumulation and stress of the high winds. Property damage costs include damage to utilities.
April 10, 2019
A historic late-season, multi-day winter storm developed rapidly across the central Plains on Wednesday, April 10. This system spiraled several periods of precipitation through the region. The leading precipitation on April 10 was a mix of rain, freezing rain and sleet from far eastern South Dakota through the Interstate 90 areas of southwest Minnesota and northwest Iowa, changing to snow to the north and west. There were even a few elevated thunderstorms which occurred overnight on April 10-11 and produced some near severe hail, which actually occurred after some initial wintry precipitation. Significant icing was centered around 30 miles either side of the Interstate 90 corridor, with as much as a third to three-quarters inch ice accumulation. ||Heavy snowfall developed from the early morning of April 11 and continued into the early morning of April 12 across much of southeast South Dakota into northern portions of southwest Minnesota, which accumulated to 1 to 2 feet during the storm. The most persistent snowfall occurred for areas west to north of Sioux Falls, but even there, a brief period of freezing rain or sleet occurred at some point ahead of the main upper trough passage. ||The other aspect of this storm was the intense winds, which gusted at the peak from 40 to 60 mph, producing widespread blizzard conditions across southeast South Dakota and southwest Minnesota. Considerable power outages occurred as transmission lines succumbed to the ice accumulation and wind. At the peak, electric companies and cooperatives estimated as many as 25,000 customers were without power. Many areas were without power for a day or two due to the intensity of the storm.||In fact, the strong winds lofted dust from the Texas/Oklahoma panhandles which caused some of the snowfall toward the latter portions of the event to fall with a brownish color. Ironically, the blizzard postponed the statewide tornado warning drill which was a part of Minnesota Severe Weather Awareness Week.
April 10, 2019
Power Outage Related Posts on X from Rock Valley, Iowa
Due to power-outage at Western Christian, tonight’s Spring Concert is cancelled. https://t.co/NFeowAp0yi
@TheWCWolfpack - May 11, 2022 22:24