Otago Daily Times

Fears over power lines, poles

- PAM JONES

A GROUP of Alexandra residents is worried power lines and poles running through Bridge Hill are in such poor condition they could cause fires and even electrocut­ion.

The residents are so concerned they have invited Aurora Energy chief executive Dr Richard Fletcher to meet them and inspect the power infrastruc­ture going up Bridge Hill through Jolendale Park towards State Highway 8.

An Aurora spokesman has replied: ‘‘We would be more than happy to meet with the residents on site’’, and offered to initiate contact between the parties.

Bridge Hill residents Ken Churchill, Geoff McHardy, Glenda Thompson, Ingrid Mueller and Chris AquilinaRo­berts say they ‘‘utterly reject’’ the recent explanatio­n of an Aurora manager that a fire caused by a power line near Jolendale Park last month was caused by a tree falling on to the power line.

They say the tree they believe Aurora is referring to fell some time ago, away from the power lines, and the break in the power lines was, in fact, 30m away from the tree. They say the fire was caused by the power line ‘‘just falling’’ on to the ground because the lines in the area are in such poor condition.

Mr McHardy was walking on Aronui Reserve land, near the boundary of Jolendale Park, when he came across the fallen power line and noticed the February 4 fire. He called 111 and fire crews extinguish­ed the fire quickly. It burnt about 75sq m of vegetation.

Mr Churchill said he was angry Aurora was claiming the fire was caused by a fallen tree, but the

fire was a symptom ‘‘of a bigger issue’’.

He said the power infrastruc­ture going through Bridge Hill, including through the Aronui Reserve and Jolendale Park, was in such poor condition he was worried more power lines or poles would fall, potentiall­y causing fires or electrocut­ion.

‘‘This area is full of people, including lots of children. We’re really worried about more power lines falling down, it’s a real danger.’’

He said examples of the dangerous infrastruc­ture included leaning power poles, multiple red, orange or blue tagged poles, a pole being supported by a ‘‘stay’’ cable only tied to a boulder, poles without possum guards, and sagging power lines.

But the residents’ greatest concern was the power lines through Bridge Hill were ‘‘grossly over

loaded’’, said Mr Churchill, who believed the power infrastruc­ture dated back to about 1950.

The Otago Daily Times sent a series of questions about the Bridge Hill infrastruc­ture to Aurora, but the response from a spokesman did not answer any of the questions directly, including how many households the Bridge Hill power lines serviced.

The response said: ‘‘We take any incident involving a line down or fire extremely seriously, which is why we are in the process of designing a new line through Jolendale Park to reduce the risk in future. The postevent investigat­ion assessed the probable cause based on available informatio­n, including onsite inspection.’’

The planning, design, constructi­on and commission­ing of the new line would take ‘‘a period of months’’, it said.

 ?? PHOTOS: PAM JONES & KEN CHURCHILL ?? Power line debate . . . Alexandra Bridge Hill resident Geoff McHardy looks over a tree he believes Aurora Energy claims caused a fire last month near Jolendale Park by falling and touching a power line. Right: A leaning power pole, with a blue tag noting defective hardware on the pole, west of Aronui Rd.
PHOTOS: PAM JONES & KEN CHURCHILL Power line debate . . . Alexandra Bridge Hill resident Geoff McHardy looks over a tree he believes Aurora Energy claims caused a fire last month near Jolendale Park by falling and touching a power line. Right: A leaning power pole, with a blue tag noting defective hardware on the pole, west of Aronui Rd.
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