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November 1, 2012 12:57 AM EST

To give you an idea of how quickly much of New York City lost power consider these numbers: at the start of Monday there were six reported power outages affecting seven businesses or homes; by Tuesday evening those numbers rose to 831,138 outages affecting 12,165 utility customers.

IBTimes/Angelo Young
A police officer directed traffic on Manhattan's Lexington Avenue on Tuesday. Most traffic lights in lower Manhattan were knocked out due largely to the flood and explosion of the ConEd substation in the Lower East Side, which was breached Tuesday by Hurricane Sandy's storm surge.

But the cleanup is well under way. Utility and sanitation workers managed overnight to start bringing down those numbers. By Wednesday morning, nearly 758,000 homes and businesses were still fully or partially offline due to more than 11,000 outages.

Most city residents without heat or power are concentrated in lower Manhattan – from the Empire State Building to the New York Stock Exchange nearly four miles to the south – a densely populated swath of Gotham that could end up celebrating Halloween with candles, powered-out cell phones, emergency radios and flashlights.

While over 200,000 of these outages are concentrated in this zone and linked to flooding and explosion at the massive substation of Consolidated Edison, Inc. (NYSE:ED) in the Lower East Side, the rest of the metro area’s power problems are scattered like fall leaves across the five boroughs and Westchester County. The main culprit: branches that fell on power lines.

Thousands of sanitation and utility workers have been working to clean up these dangerous messes that pose a risk to passersby that might not be aware of the live electrical wires tangled in the fallen branches. On Wednesday morning ConEd issued a warning to trick-or-treaters and other Halloween revelers to be wary of downed electrical wires or equipment and to be visible to motorists in areas still without power tonight.

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(Photo: IBTimes/Angelo Young / )
A police officer directed traffic on Manhattan's Lexington Avenue on Tuesday. Most traffic lights in lower Manhattan were knocked out due largely to the flood and explosion of the ConEd substation in the Lower East Side, which was breached Tuesday by Hurricane Sandy's storm surge.
(Photo: IBTimes/Angelo Young / )
Sanitation workers picked up branches from Manhattan's First Avenue in the upper East side Tuesday as the city began to assess the damages and look for electrical dangers scattered across the five boroughs and Westchester County.
(Photo: IBTimes/Angelo Young / )
Fallen trees on Broadway in Manhattan's Upper West side.
(Photo: IBTimes/Angelo Young / )
Water collected in a pool below the Robert F. Kennedy (Queensboro) Bridge.
(Photo: IBTimes/Angelo Young / )

City workers laid cones to warn drivers to stay away from trees that had fallen on vehicles and could contain hidden in the leaves and branches a potential death trap.

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