UPDATE, 1:10 p.m. Wednesday: As of 1 p.m. Wednesday, 166 structures in Amherst County were reported damaged from Sunday's tornado.
Twenty-three are categorized as restricted use, while 22 are severely damaged or count as total losses. In all, 289 buildings have been inspected.
The structural dollar loss now is estimated at $4,444,114.87, officials said.
Building assessments will continue throughout the week.
Amherst County Public Schools will reopen Thursday on a regular schedule, according to the school system's website.
In Lynchburg, officials estimate about $7.5 million in damaged throughout the city, mostly to homes.
About 52 structures received "major" damage, and two were destroyed, the city said in a news release.
Most roads that were closed now are passable, although Link and VES roads remain closed.
EARLIER: While Appalachian Power expects to have power restored by midnight tonight to most customers affected by Sunday's tornado, some may have to wait longer.
About 2,300 APCo customers in Lynchburg and Amherst County remain without power, according to a news release from the utility sent shortly after 10 a.m. Wednesday. At the peak of outages related to Sunday's tornado, about 20,000 customers were without power.
"The majority of these customers receive their power from the company’s Peakland/Rivermont Station in Lynchburg," APCo spokesperson Teresa Hamilton Hall wrote in the news release, referring to those still without electricity.
"A transmission line that provides power from the station to customers in the Lynchburg area was heavily damaged in the storm. Restoration to these customers, as well as customers in the Abert and Elon communities in Amherst County, will likely extend beyond midnight tonight. Downed trees and wind-blown debris have made access and repair work difficult in areas that received heavy damage."
"Nearly 300 Appalachian Power employees and contract workers, and 120 tree and flagging crews are dedicated to the restoration effort. Reported damage includes broken power poles, destroyed cross arms, and wire on the ground and in trees. Workers report that utility damage has been especially prevalent through the path of the tornado," she wrote.