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posted by cmn32480 on Wednesday June 07 2017, @10:47AM   Printer-friendly
from the that-seems-blatantly-unsafe dept.

Verizon and a union representing its workers have reached a settlement requiring the company to fix thousands of problems in areas of Pennsylvania where it hasn't upgraded its copper network to fiber.

The settlement of the union's complaint "will require the company to repair and replace bad cable, defective equipment, faulty back-up batteries, and to take down 15,000 double telephone poles," the Communications Workers of America (CWA) said Friday.

Double poles occur when "Verizon has failed to move its equipment from an old pole that was replaced with a new one by another utility (e.g., the electric company)," the CWA said. "In many cases, these are dangerous conditions—poles are falling, leaning, rotting, partially cut off, etc."

How many double poles are in the state is not clear. The settlement requires Verizon to fix "at least" 15,000 within three years. There are also "dangling pieces of old poles" resulting from Verizon doing "everything it can to avoid the expense of moving its facilities to a new pole," as shown in the pictures above and detailed in the union's complaint against Verizon.

"When VZPA does nothing, and the electric utility must remove the pole from the base, it may leave the portion of the old pole containing VZPA facilities just dangling over the right of way, tied to the new pole by a single cable or a make-shift wooden support," the union complaint said.

https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2017/06/verizon-grudgingly-agrees-to-fix-thousands-of-copper-network-problems/

-- submitted from IRC


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  • (Score: 2) by VLM on Wednesday June 07 2017, @08:43PM

    by VLM (445) on Wednesday June 07 2017, @08:43PM (#522207)

    I suppose that would include substations, switchgear, etc. The only trouble I see is: how to incentivize them to be proactive in maintenance to reduce long-term costs.

    Private ownership of switchgear seems to work pretty well.

    2001 American Transmission Company, the first multi-state all-transmission utility in the United States, was formed by Wisconsin's major utilities, and Wisconsin Electric transferred ownership of its transmission lines to American Transmission in exchange for shares in the new company.

    I guess I feel the need to disclaim that I own stock in this company. I'm just stating the facts, so that probably doesn't matter.

    I've researched the hell out of the fields I've invested in for decades and I invest heavily in energy companies mostly. I donno why other than I like them and learning about energy companies is strangely interesting niche hobby. So for a "civilian" I know a hell of a lot about power plant operations or nuclear plant fuel financing or oil refinery design or whatever. Energy infrastructure is just interesting.

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