The company will have to wait for flood waters to recede before workers can enter some facilities to assess damage, Con Edison said.
As equipment is inspected and determined safe to energize, the company said the highest priority for restoration will go to critical customer facilities that have an impact on the general public such as mass transit, hospitals, police and fire stations, and sewage and water-pumping stations.
Con Edison said workers continue to monitor underground electrical delivery equipment in other areas of Manhattan south of 36th Street, along with section of Brooklyn, Queens and the Bronx, for flooding and possible shutdowns.
A few hours before the power shutdown, the company notified customers through an automated calling system that their power might be shut off.
"We wanted to let people know in and around these areas that there may be disruption to their service," Con Edison spokesman Alfonso Quiroz told Reuters.
(Reporting by Scott DiSavino and David Sheppard; Editing by Phil Berlowitz and Andrew Hay)
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