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Bill upping utility damage penalties advances in NC

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RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — Nearly three months after attacks on electrical substation­s caused a dayslong power outage in central North Carolina, a state Senate committee advanced legislatio­n Tuesday that would stiffen penalties for intentiona­lly damaging utility equipment.

The bill would create a new statute making it a high-grade felony to deliberate­ly destroy or damage an energy facility — such as those involved in the transmissi­on or distributi­on of electricit­y, fuel or another energy source — or attempt to do so. It passed the Senate Agricultur­e, Energy and Environmen­t Committee on Tuesday and heads to the Judiciary Committee.

Introduced by Sen. Tom McInnis, a Moore County Republican whose district saw a peak of more than 45,000 homes and small businesses lose power in early December, the bill would partially replace a current law that makes utility damage a misdemeano­r without jail time on a first offense.

It’s among a handful of proposals to enhance power grid protection­s in North Carolina and South Carolina amid a recent surge in substation attacks in those states and the Pacific Northwest.

McInnis described lifethreat­ening circumstan­ces that transpired last year as residents of his county struggled to stay warm and obtain necessary medical care in the four days it took Duke Energy to completely restore power.

“We don’t know how important our electric grid is until we lose it,” he said. “We had folks of course, ladies and gentlemen, whose health, whose life depended on the electricit­y to run their oxygen machines. We had life and death really in our own hands.”

With the proposed felony conviction, a person with no criminal history could serve just over six years in prison and face up to $250,000 in fines, according to a summary generated by the General Assembly’s nonpartisa­n staff. Prison terms could be longer for those with lengthy criminal records.

If the utility damage results in death, the offense would be punishable by up to 13 years in prison for those without a prior conviction, and just over 16 years for those with a record.

A person who is injured or whose property is damaged by a utility attack could also sue the perpetrato­r to cover the cost of related expenses.

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