89°F
weather icon Clear

Power restored to Death Valley National Park after Friday’s thunderstorm

Power has been restored to Death Valley National Park after a Friday night thunderstorm damaged roads and utilities within the park.

The national park reported that the Furnace Creek Visitor Center had been reopened at about noon on Sunday. Many services at the Furnace Creek Ranch Hotel will remain closed until Monday, and Scotty’s Castle and Titus Canyon roads as well as the Beatty Cutoff are also closed due to storm damage.

Workers from Death Valley and the Lake Mead National Recreation Area are clearing debris from the roads and repairing shoulders that were washed out by flooding, but a Death Valley spokesperson said there is no estimate of when the roads will be reopened

Three power poles in the park were damaged in the storm, as well as buildings in the park service employee housing area of the park.

The gas station at Furnace Creek and Panamint Springs Resort have been reopened, and limited services are available at Stovepipe Wells Village.

After Friday’s storm the park asked that potential visitors “please reconsider” before entering the park over the weekend.

THE LATEST
Free summer meals begin in Southern Nevada

The Summer Food Service Program is offering free meals to kids and teens 18 years and younger in southern Nevada.

As Calif. considers refinery profit caps, Arizona and Nevada fear rising gas prices

As the California Energy Commission considers adopting a rule to put profit caps on the state’s remaining 9 refineries — the only ones producing the state’s special gas formulation — Arizona and Nevada, which use California gas, could face higher gas prices.