Gigi,
I just finished getting things back together in my family home in Brookland and returned home. One thing that I did was call my personal electrician who is working today. He mentioned something that I thought should be brought up.
Many of the homes in our more well established neighborhoods haven't been updated from an electrical stand point in decades leading to issues beyond PEPCO's control yet which adds extra stress to the system.
He also reminded me of what it cost to pay a union electrical worker on overtime which PEPCO must do.
You keep on saying that we need better service and new upgrades but fail to explain how they can and will be paid for. Yes the company has to pay for some of this but can't and won't do it alone.
Folks constantly talk of being good neighbors yet aren't putting in the effort to take care of trees on their property, upgrading their electrical systems in house and reducing the stress on the system which causes more problems for the greater community.
I personally looked at the fuse box (yes I said fuse box) in my grandparents home and it said inspected & approves 6/8/71. Now I know that my folks can't afford to get a new panel put in and that more than likely my wife and I will have to try to find a way to deal with it but this is what I mean.
Right after that I knocked on the doors of a few neighbors who I knew were home and asked them to check theirs. All but one of them had fuse boxes older than 1982. This also means that they may have knob and tube wiring which is an added stress on the system & a fire hazard.
This type of stuff must also be addressed in addition to working with PEPCO to come up with a real solution. If we don't do it bow wr will (a) watch things get worse as the money to deal with them will never surface or (b) we will wait until the last minute and face outrageous prices like Montgomery and Prince Georges Counties.
Eric J. Jones
- ejjones.threed@gmail.com
--It is gratifying to hear that there was only one DC resident who sustained a major injury from last night's storm that sweep through DC and the counties. Though you don't want anyone hurt, due to the velosity of the storm, fallen trees and power lines it could have been worst.We just came out of additional rounds of Formal Case 1087, Pepco rate increase request for over $42 million dollars! Again, thanks to not only Kathy H, other W5 residents along with citywide ANCs, community leaders, AARP, other community and businesses orgs, along with just plain feed up residents who didn't believe that Pepco had made enough progress in turning things around to more positive business operations, quality of service, reliability and responses to emergency situations. I thought last year's response to the Hurricane, other isolated matters showed that Pepco took to heart the outcries from MD & DC residents and elected officials. I gave them a little benefit of the doubt, but also didn't agree that they deserved a rate increase, Pepco had to truly earn it this time.Pepco's preparedness and response to yesterday's swift moving storm perdicted and reported to occur from 3-5 days prior showed they are not. From what I heard, as of 12:00 noon, over 9,000 DC residents were still without power. About 1 hr ago, I heard the number was reduced to 7,000. Since last year, all the commercials, print and other ads, millions of dollars of ratepayers money was spent to try to convince ratepayers about how much Pepco has improved to justify the rate increase request was just a waste of ratepayer dollars since too many thousands are still without power.Late last night, I reported to Jeannette Mobley that power lines and what looked like a small transformer was down in my SMD by 4520 Ft. Totten Road NE due to the storm. Have to take that back because I learned this afternoon that this line has been down for about 1 week. Fire Dept taped off. It is safe to assume Fire Dept reported this through the proper channels. Why wasn't this problem repaired prior to the storm?What happened? Because the PSC hearing a few weeks ago didn't seem to go Pepco's way was there a decision made not to prepare for this predicted severe storm, have out-of-town crews here in the Metro area on standby readiness? Doesn't Pepco have a more advanced weather system or access to one than the average ratepayer?On top of that, again, there has been no direct continuous communications with the public other than news reports. Just saw one that focused on MD. Hmmm, they have a Governor and PSC that is seriously upset with Pepco. We need a Press Release from our PSC as to their concerns about the progress or lack thereof. Hoep CM Alexander will hold a hearing on this matter. DDOT sent one out this morning (9:33am) advising of the cleanup crews (below). Also below is the Pepco 5:30pm News Release from their website. Didn't check prior to writing this.CM McDuffie and Jeannette, their staff have been hard at work throughout the night and today trying to get answers and related problems resolved and assistance for those in W5 that have been adversely impacted, not knowing when the lights will come back on.New century, advances in technology, trained workers, yet, we get another 3rd World response.We can't let the few continue to stand up for the many in their efforts to fight these continuous Pepco rate increase requests. Pepco, a multi million or maybe billion dollar corporation which has been documented to pay no taxes continue to get away with treating its ratepayers as an option, with the pockets of their executives and shareholders being the priority!Had enough? What do you have to say? Also like let your appointed and elected officials know. Send emails."Let there be Light" Hopefully for all DC residents TONIGHT, not sunday or Monday morning like the Pepco News Release states!
Albrette "Gigi" Ransom_________________________________Pepco Crews Working Round the Clock to Restore PowerSaturday, June 23, 2012Thunderstorm Leaves Severe Damage in its WakeWASHINGTON, D.C. – Crews and support personnel are working around the clock to restore powerto customers after severe thunderstorms left devastation in some neighborhoods and infrastructuredamage across Pepco's service territory.In preparation for the storm, Pepco lined up additional crews and call center personnel. Crews fromother utilities also are helping restore power.As of 5:30 p.m. Saturday, crews had restored power to approximately more than 75 percent of thecustomers who lost electricity. At the peak late Friday night, about 45,000 customers were withoutpower — more than 18,000 in the District of Columbia, more than 17,000 in Prince George's Countyand 9,000 in Montgomery County. As of 5:30 p.m. Saturday, fewer than 11,000 remained withoutpower — 3,800 in D.C., about 6,500 in Prince George's County and about 500 in MontgomeryCounty.Prince George's County and areas in Northeast D.C. suffered the most severe damage and werewhere more outages were concentrated.Thomas H. Graham, President, Pepco Region, toured affected areas Saturday afternoon."The devastation in some neighborhoods was profound," Graham said. "In one case, we hadsomeone's roof on one of our utility poles. We are working very hard to get the power back on, but weare dealing with many challenges."Much of the damage was caused by trees — many uprooted; some through buildings; and many thattook down wires, broke crossarms and in some cases cracked or broke utility poles.Customers are asked to please avoid downed wires, even if they don't appear to be energized.Customers can report downed wires by calling 1-877-PEPCO62. Customers also are asked to reportoutages by calling 1-877-PEPCO62, through pepco.com or through the mobile app, available fordownload through pepco.com/mobileapp.Pepco anticipates restoring power:· To Montgomery County by the early morning hours Sunday· To most of the District and Prince George's County very late Sunday night, into early Monday hours· To the hardest-hit areas of Bladensburg, Hyattsville, Cheverly plus some areas in Northeast D.C.later into Monday morning or early afternoon.For more information and updates, visit www.pepco.com, follow us on Facebook and Twitter atPepcoConnect and download our mobile app atwww.pepco.com/mobileapp.###Pepco, a subsidiary of Pepco Holdings, Inc. (NYSE: POM), delivers safe, reliable and affordableelectric service to more than 788,000 customers in Maryland and the District of Columbia._______________________________________DDOT List DDOT ListGovernment of the District of ColumbiaDepartment of TransportationFOR IMMEDIATE RELEASESaturday, June 23, 2012Media Contact: John Lisle at 202‐486‐5838, john.lisle@dc.govDistrict Crews Cleaning Up Tree Damage(Washington, D.C.) Crews from the District Department of Transportation (DDOT) are working this morning to removedowned trees, branches and debris from District streets and neighborhoods. Damage caused by last night's storm hasalready generated more than 100 tree‐related service requests for DDOT and its contractors, with the worst damagereported in Wards 4 and 5.District residents are reminded to call 311 or go online at 311.dc.gov to report downed trees and branches in public space.The service requests are immediately forwarded to DDOT's Urban Forestry Administration (UFA). Priority is given to street trees that have fallen on homes, cars and power lines, and trees that are blocking roadways; then UFA will shift its focus to storm clean up in alleys and other tree related storm debris.DDOT is also coordinating with Pepco to address locations where wires are tangled in downed trees. To report a poweroutage please call Pepco at 877‐PEPCO62. Customers may report outages online at pepco.com or download Pepco's smart phone app, pepco.com/mobileapp, to report and track their outages.District residents are reminded that trees and branches that fall on or from private property are the responsibility of theproperty owners.####
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