(919)
929-1670
capowski@m
Mayor
and Town Council
Town
of
Dear
Mayor Foy and Members of the Town Council,
Please start the processes
to bury our electrical power distribution system.
Duke Power representatives have described to you
their heroic efforts to restore power to us customers after the recent ice
storm. I commend the linesmen and their
support staff who did the actual work under extremely difficult and dangerous
conditions. However, to a large part
their efforts were made heroic by the failure of the management of Duke Power
to learn from the 1996 Hurricane Fran and take steps to reduce the vulnerability
of our power distribution system to storms.
I live in Westwood, one of the town's older
neighborhoods, and while my petition uses Westwood as an example, everything I
present here was repeated often throughout the entire town. Below is one picture of storm damage to the
power system. Please note that every
electrical component in the photo (wires, transformers, poles, etc) is only six
years old.
Capowski
petition,
The
reason that all the electrical components in the photo are only six years old
is that after Fran, Duke Power crews rebuilt the entire power distribution
system in
Mr.
E.O. Ferrell, Duke's VP of
Power Distribution, tells us that Duke would bury power lines,
but the cost is enormous, and Duke customers in
What
is the cost of 50,000 Chapel Hillians shivering in
the dark for six days?
What
is the cost of carbon monoxide poisonings?
What
is the cost of house fires?
What
is the cost of schools being closed for several days?
What
is the cost of merchants being closed for six days?
What
is the lost revenue to Duke Power from its customers?
What
reconstruction costs would be saved if the system were less damaged?
What
new materials engineering products can be used to reduce the cost of line
burial?
Hurricanes
and ice storms will continue to occur -- they are part of our climate. Since Duke Power on its own will not reduce
the vulnerability of the power distribution system, please require that they do
so. I see this as a long process,
involving local and state legislation, new electrical construction standards,
and even cooperative financing. I
anticipate that Duke Power will muster its lawyers, lobbyists and political
contributions to fight any new regulations.
However,
Though
it is not the current focus, improved aesthetics are an added benefit derived
from burying the power system. Plain and
simple, overhead wires are ugly.
Those
who ignore history are condemned to repeat it.
We've repeated it once; let's not do it again.
As
always, I thank you for your service to our town.
Joe
Capowski