The high winds arrived Sunday afternoon, taking out what wasn't nailed down and knocking out power to some across the Rochester region.

Overnight Sunday into Monday there were many 911 calls for downed trees and power lines. 

There are still dangerous conditions in some areas as strong gusts of wind continue to pass through, but the travel advisory in Monroe County has been lifted as we made it through the worst of the windstorm.

An update on power outage numbers came in Monday morning and this storm, overall, is causing nothing like the outage numbers we saw in 2017's windstorm.

National Grid still has several thousand customers without power in Genesee and Orleans Counties, but RG&E has restored energy for most customers in Monroe County. The utility companies estimate power will be restored to all homes within the next few hours.

If you had plans to fly out of Rochester Monday morning, be sure to check your flight. More than a dozen departures have been canceled. Flights scheduled to arrive and depart in Rochester after 9 a.m. Monday remain OK.

Monroe County Executive Cheryl Dinolfo was at the Emergency Operations Center on Scottsville Road Monday morning to offer an update on the storm status and explain how the EOC is a great asset for these weather events.

"It works very, very well to have a central location like the emergency operations center," Dinolfo said. To have everybody here, hands on deck to respond to any situations that might arise. That being said, since the National Weather Service has extended the wind advisory to four o'clock, we will be here throughout the duration of the event."

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