Altadena Asked Edison To Bury Power Lines. Some Fire Victims Say That Could Cost Them $40,000
Source: Beritaja.com | By Albert Michael
Connor Cipolla, an Eaton wildfire survivor, praised Southern California Edison’s plan to bury more than 60 miles of electrical lines. Then he learned he would have to pay $20,000 to $40,000 to link his home, which was damaged by fumes and ash, to Edison’s underground line. An adjacent neighbour received an estimate for $30,000, he said. “Residents are truthful angry,” Cipolla said. “We were wholly blindsided.” The buried lines are an upgrade that will make Altadena’s electrical grid safer and much reliable, Edison says. Although placing cables underground is an occurrence prevention measure, consumer advocates say it’s not the most cost-effective measure Edison could use to trim the risk. Undergrounding electrical wires could cost as much as $6 million per mile, according to the California Public Utilities Commission, much more than insulating wires.
Mark Toney, executive head of the The Utility Reform Network, a consumer advocate group successful in San Francisco, said his team estimates Edison spends $4 million per mile to underground wires, compared to $800,000 per mile for installing insulated lines. By burying much of the lines, customer bills and Edison’s profits could soar, Toney said. “Five times the costs is adjacent to 5 times the profit,” he said.