Storm response is more than a technical challenge. It’s a test of coordination, resilience, and readiness across every part of a utility’s operation. Storms are becoming more frequent and less predictable, putting pressure on utilities to restore power safely and quickly—often across large, complex events.
The New Reality: Storm Frequency, Severity & Operational Pressure
Outages aren’t new, but the conditions around them have changes. Even in a typical year, U.S. electricity customers averaged 5.5 hours of interruptions in 2022, according to the Energy Information Administration. Weather is increasingly the driving force behind those interruptions.
Of all major U.S. power outages reported from 2000 to 2023, 80% were due to weather.
In 2019, major events caused more than double the outage time of routine interruptions — 3.2 hours compared to just 1.5 hours without major events. For utilities, a single severe weather event can mean managing thousands of interruptions at once.
Storm response is no longer episodic. It has to be built into day-to-day operations.
Where Traditional Storm Response Breaks Down
For decades, storm response depended on manual processes: paper packets, radio and phone communications, and “bird dogs” with local knowledge guiding crews through unfamiliar territory. These methods worked, but they break down during large, fast-moving events. According to a recent study by JD Power, the average length of the longest power outage has increased in all regions since 2022, adding pressure on utilities to respond faster and coordinate more effectively.
The challenge is not effort. It is coordination. Utility leaders consistently point to one shift: moving away from fragmented, manual coordination to a more connected way of working.
What’s Driving Faster, Safer Storm Response
Faster storm response comes down to better information and coordination especially around assessment, crew coordination, and real-time visibility.
1. Rapid, Accurate Damage Assessment
Instead of waiting on paper packets or fragmented updates, crews now capture and share damage information as it becomes available, even from remote regions.
In practice, that includes:
This reduces guesswork and helps utilities prioritize work and dispatch crews more safely and effectively.
2. Scalable Crew Coordination & Mutual Aid Integration
A hurricane, derecho, wildfire, or winter storm can sweep across multiple counties, cities, utilities, and states in a single event. These events require coordinated, standardized processes across mutual aid crews and multiple organizations. When hundreds of mutual aid and contractor crews are involved, consistency becomes critical.
“When you talk about standardization of information and process alignment across not only the organization, but the organizations you’re bringing in to help you, that becomes a really important component when speed matters and getting the lights back on is job number one.”
Bonnie Titone, Chief Administration Officer, Duke Energy
With mobile workforce platforms, utilities are able to:
For many utilities, this makes it easier to manage large numbers of crews during major outages.
3. Safety Through Shared Situational Awareness
Speed matters, but so does safety.
Crews need visibility into field conditions. They see where other crews are, which devices are open, and whether grounds are placed. Shared visibility helps reduce the risk of miscommunication or unsafe conditions.
Together, these capabilities reduce manual coordination and give teams a clearer operating picture, the foundation utilities need before communication, customer updates, and restoration decisions begin.
Communication in the Storm: Transparency at Scale
Storm communication has traditionally meant overloaded phone lines and limited visibility for both crews and customers. Today, communication tools play a central role in storm response.
Recently Jef Gray, from Kissimmee Utility Authority, demonstrated how texting, now deeply embedded into their operational model, has transformed storm communications:
Gray also emphasized that texting isn’t just a customer tool. It has become indispensable for internal coordination as well. During storms, cyber events, or morning roll call, group texting enables instant check-ins and rapid mobilization across teams, ensuring everyone is aligned and safe.
“We use it for storm communications, but also for incidents for cyber… You can type a few words and it goes to the entire group. Within seconds, everybody checks in. Customer service can even do their roll call for hurricanes with one text. People just reply with a ‘Y,’ and you see the tally.”
Jef Gray, Vice President, Information Technology, Kissimmee Utility Authority
This ability to connect both crews and customers in real time strengthens operational situational awareness and supports faster, safer decision-making when pressure is highest.
How Mobile Workforce Technology Transforms Storm Response
What Orchestration Really Looks Like During a Major Event
Connecting people, processes, and data into one operational view, especially under pressure, has become central to success in outage response.
1. End-to-End Crew Management
Callout, rostering, staging, dispatch, timekeeping, and reporting can be managed within the same workflow. Reducing re-entry and gaps in documentation.
“At the end of the day, when process and technology break down, you revert back to a Big Chief tablet. That’s how we used to run storms. Now the goal is digital consistency so no one has to revert to paper under pressure.”
Darrin Reeb, Managing Director of Field Mobility & Channel Partnerships , ARCOS
2. Damage → Assignment → Restoration = One Workflow
Mobile workforce technology allows utilities to move from assessment to work assignment to completion in one coordinated chain with fewer delays and less duplication.
3. Data-Driven ETRs and Transparent Reporting
Real-time updates on damage, crew progress, and material needs flow directly into dashboards and reporting tools. Utilities can improve ETR accuracy, communicate proactively, and support regulatory recovery after the storm.
While these tools are transforming today’s storm response, utilities are already looking ahead. They know that the next major event will require even more precision, automation, and predictive insight.
How Utilities Are Preparing for the Future
Modernizing storm response isn’t only about today’s tools. It’s about laying the groundwork for the next decade of resilience.
Utilities are also exploring:
During a storm, speed and coordination matter. For utilities, the path forward is clear: storm readiness now depends on orchestrated operations. Utilities need a way to bring people, processes, and data together, so crews can mobilize quickly, leaders can make informed decisions, and customers stay informed.
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