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BPL: 8,000 customers still without power supply

Power Secure workers fixing a damaged pole. 
Photo: Shawn Hanna/Tribune Staff

Power Secure workers fixing a damaged pole. Photo: Shawn Hanna/Tribune Staff

By SANCHESKA DORSETT

Tribune Staff Reporter

sdorsett@tribunemedia.net

MORE than 90 per cent of Bahamas Power and Light’s residential customers in New Providence have been restored to supply, however there are still approximately 8,000 customers without power, BPL said yesterday.

In a press release, the company said it is continuing its “aggressive approach to restoring power to these customers within the shortest possible time.”

BPL said it expects by the weekend the company will be “well above” 90 per cent restoration.

Restoration in the Family Islands is complete, the release said, with the

exception of North and Central Andros where restoration is now above 70 per cent.

BPL explained that there are some areas where the company is experiencing difficulties because of flooding and obstruction of lines by trees, saying these areas will “take some time” to be restored.

In Sanford Drive, Sans Souci, South Beach east and west, Sea Breeze and Imperial Park, BPL said the majority of distribution lines are placed at the rear of residential properties making it difficult for crews to access.

“Some homes are walled or fenced in, also making it harder for crews to carry out repairs,” BPL’s press release said. “Additionally, bucket trucks needed to expedite repairs have difficulty reaching these lines as homeowners have expanded their property on to BPL’s ‘right of way’. BPL also has problems with additional backyard structures and trees - planted by customers - obstructing access to these lines. The company now has to look at less efficient and more time consuming ways of repairing downed poles and lines in these areas.”

At Lumumba Lane, Hanna Road, Marshall Road, St Andrews Beach Estates, Sea Gull Close, Misty Gardens and Yamacraw Beach Estates, BPL said flooding remains a challenge.

“While BPL has made significant progress restoring power to these areas, the impact of flooding remains a challenge. Power cannot be restored generally - in some cases - or to individual properties until Ministry of Works inspectors complete an assessment of the structures and give authorisation that the area can be energised,” the statement said.

“In Yamacraw Beach Estates, flooding not only impacted homes in the area but also BPL’s underground infrastructure. The salt water damaged the underground cables that now need to be repaired. In addition to this being an extremely difficult and time consuming job, the Ministry of Works must also carry out its inspections before the area can be energised.”

BPL also said there are several areas with few or single customers without power and a number of customers whose service wires have been damaged or disconnected from BPL supply.

“If a service mast is damaged, customers must have it repaired privately,” the statement said.

“BPL’s service crews will then reconnect supply wires to the mast. Customers should be aware that due to the high volume of service issues across the island it will take time for crews to complete these types of repairs. In fact, in any restoration effort these are usually the last to complete.”

The company said officials are confident that with the assistance of its CARILEC, PowerSecure, and local contractor teams, full restoration will be achieved very soon.

Comments

Reality_Check 7 years, 5 months ago

The photo to this article says it all. Here we are more than 43 years after our independence having to bring foreigners into our country to deal with our own power needs. The responsible technical persons we had in government pre-independent Bahamas have all now quit or retired and for decades there has been no replenishment of them. For the past 25 years, most sensible Bahamians that have gone abroad and obtained an education in a technical field have not returned to the Bahamas. Why should they? Bahamians who have received a good education abroad and possess considerable technical expertise are rightfully not inclined to return to the Bahamas and work for a corrupt government led by a bunch of ignorant buffoons who are only capable of lining their own pockets while recognizing and rewarding political loyalty and patronage to the exclusion of everything else. I have a Bahamian nephew who holds a masters degree in electrical engineering and computer science from the Georgia Institute of Technology. Since graduation he has received 10 years of invaluable work experience with Duke Energy, a public utility company in the U.S. He laughed at me several years ago when I suggested he consider returning to the Bahamas to put his technical expertise to good use at BEC. Can't say I blame him and I'm sure there are thousands of Bahamians working abroad just like him. Our successive corrupt governments since independence continue to naturally repel the best Bahamian talent simply because they are too easily threatened by it. This has allowed foreign contractors over the years to royally rip off the Bahamian people by entering into all sorts of side deals with our corrupt government officials. And round and round it goes until our balloon of national debt is finally over inflated by our current corrupt Christie-led government to the point where it simply bursts alla Venezuela. Yes folks, this is perhaps the most telling indictment of the extent to which Crooked Christie and equally crooked Ingraham have brought our country to its knees!

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observer2 7 years, 5 months ago

We export our best and brightest and imports the dregs.

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