Power outage after crane pulls down utility pole

By KHRISNA VIRGIL

Tribune Staff Reporter

kvirgil@tribunemedia.net

SEVERAL businesses and homes were without electricity yesterday after a crane accidentally caught a high tension wire pulling down a utility pole at Harrold Road, according to Leslie Miller, outgoing Executive Bahamas Electricity Corporation Chairman.

Speaking to The Tribune, Mr Miller said the incident happened at around 11.30am with a utility pole just before where Harrold Road meets John F Kennedy Drive.

Major portions of JFK Drive, Harrold Road, the Tall Pines consistency, Gladstone Road and Victoria Gardens suffered power loss for an extended time as a result, he said.

“A crane pulled down one of the high tension wires on Harrold Road and JFK and tore down one of the poles and this happened before 12 noon,” Mr Miller said.

“Now I just spoke to them guys at BEC its almost 4pm and they just now mobilising a crew to go out there and get the problem fixed.”

Angered by the delay, Mr Miller said none of the workers at BEC “give a damn” about consumers who went for hours without electricity. He said dozens of businesses also collectively lost thousands of dollars.

“They were made aware of this pole and that power was out from this morning when it happened. Yet still here it is almost 4 o’clock and they are just now getting it together to fix the problem.

“You see now it is summer time, vacation, and Christmas is coming. They know that overtime pay kicks in at 4pm so they took their slow time to get the people’s power on.”

Earlier this month, nearly one-third of the island’s residential power supply was disconnected after an engine malfunctioned at the Baillou Hills Power Station.

At the time Mr Miller said several areas across the island experienced a brief power outage for around 20 minutes to an hour when engine four at the Baillou Hills station tripped offline.

Mr Miller said it took technicians between 30 minutes to one hour to repair that engine.

Some of the affected areas were Palmdale, Camperdown, Prince Charles Drive, Pinewood Gardens, Treasure Cove, Mount Vernon, Chippingham and South Beach, among others.

In June Mr Miller warned residents across New Providence to expect load shedding as BEC grappled with power generation issues.

At the time, Mr Miller said while the corporation had installed 40 extra megawatts of power this did not prove to be enough to sustain the island.

He said BEC’s board of directors recommended to management that 60 megawatts of power be installed, but Mr Miller said management refused to listen to the advice because “everyone on the board is on their way out”.

He said the shortfall caused power outages island wide.

Comments

proudloudandfnm says...

BEC sure has a lot of accidents......

Dumb excuses.... Just admit you guys have no idea what you're doing man.....

Posted 28 July 2015, 3:17 p.m. Suggest removal

John says...

So when they had the foreign (white) man running BTC he couldn't get the phone system fixed and you know what else happened that forced other people to resign after this man got fired. Now is the same thing going to happen at PowerSecure err I mean BEC?

Posted 29 July 2015, 8:50 a.m. Suggest removal

sheeprunner12 says...

PowerSecure is a management company ........... so now we will have three levels of management at BEC ..... BEC senior technocrats (Executive), the Board and PowerSecure (LMAO) ............... more people to pay and get perks from a broke-ass govt. corporation

But what BEC needs is .............. new mission, new generators/RE, new fuel and new employees .................... that means PRIVATIZATION

Posted 29 July 2015, 9:21 a.m. Suggest removal

newcitizen says...

Sell it! We pay crazy rates and still have to pay more at the end of the year through our taxes. Even if a private company was ripping us off like a bandit we would still be saving money over the government run BEC.

Posted 29 July 2015, 11:05 a.m. Suggest removal

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