TELECOM Digest OnLine - Sorted: Getting Electricity Back to the Gulf Coast


Getting Electricity Back to the Gulf Coast


Ron Scherer (csm@telecom-digest.org)
Sun, 4 Sep 2005 18:18:17 -0500

http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0902/p02s02-ussc.html

By Ron Scherer | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

NEW YORK - Heat. Humidity. Fifteen- to 16-hour days. Not to mention
snakes and high-voltage wires.

Jeff Malaby knows that conditions will be tough as he and thousands of
other electric utility workers head to the Gulf Coast to restore power
in the aftermath of hurricane Katrina. But repairing the damage to the
electrical system is vital for the region to regain its footing.

Without power, essential services -- from sewage plants to hospitals --
can't operate. Police officers are unable to recharge their
phones. The need is also pressing to repower the giant refineries that
supply an important portion of the nation's gasoline. And at some
point, the crews will start the long process of connecting homes so
that air conditioners and dehumidifiers can run again.

"Electricity is always a priority in disasters," says Jane Bullock, a
former chief of staff at the Federal Emergency Management Agency and
now an adjunct professor at the George Washington University Institute
for Crisis, Disaster and Risk Management. "For essential functions, it
is just necessary."

The process is likely to be long. Some 2.8 million customers lost
their power in the region. And it's not just a matter of restringing
electric wire as crews did in Florida after Katrina passed through
there.

"I expect to see complete devastation, and our efforts will be to
completely rebuild the lines," says Mr. Malaby, a Dominion Virginia
Power worker who just finished leading a team of 50 in south Florida.

But utility companies, particularly those in storm-prone areas, have
considerable experience rebuilding the electrical system. They usually
start with a broad assessment of damages, says Ken Hall, director of
security, transmission, and distribution operations at the Edison
Electric Institute in Washington: "They need to determine what needs
to be replaced, to determine whether the power lines were blown down
or something landed on them."

Mr. Hall says the normal process is for some crews to work on the
transmission system -- that is, the large voltage lines transporting
electricity from the generating station to the substation. These lines
are typically mounted on large metal towers that tend to survive
storms better than the wooden poles moving electricity to residential
and commercial customers.

At the same time, other crews will tackle the distribution system,
working out from the substation. They will repair the main lines, then
the lines leading into neighborhoods, and finally the hookup to homes,
says Hall.

Getting the electricity back in downtown New Orleans, however, will be
more challenging. For one thing, some of the electric lines are below
ground. If mud and water have seeped into the electrical wiring, the
cable will have to be replaced.

Depending on the damage, crews can often get electricity restored
relatively quickly. After hurricane Ivan, they averaged between five
and 10 days to rebuild the systems, says Hall.

Thursday, in the aftermath of Katrina, Florida Power & Light Company
reported that it had returned power to 99 percent of its customers.
(Some 15,490 were still without electricity.)

The Florida utility company also released 1,000 restoration workers --
most from other utility companies -- so they could head for the Gulf
region.

Among them is Malaby and his 50-person crew from Virginia. Thursday,
they were heading to Amite, La., a staging ground for repair work, to
join up with more than 300 other workers from Virginia.

For the trip to the Gulf, Malaby is buying bottled water and
nonperishable food supplies so the crew can be self-sustaining for a
few days.

"We won't be getting three square meals a day, and we'll probably be
sleeping on cots in a gymnasium," he says. "I have some concerns about
the sanitary conditions as well."

But despite the harsh conditions, it's a job he's volunteered for.
"There is a lot of job satisfaction in these efforts," he says. It's
one of the reasons the crew will work extra hours.

"Sometimes if you are close to getting people back their power, you
don't want to leave until you get it done," he says. "Some people are
eternally grateful. There can be hugging and kissing and people offering you
sodas."

www.csmonitor.com | Copyright 2005 The Christian Science Monitor.

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