The Day

Norwich Public Utilities adapts to storm response

- C.bessette@theday.com

During the peak outage, 6,500 NPU customers were without power, with heavy damage in the Taftville, Greenevill­e, West Side and Yantic Lane areas. Citywide, 15 utility poles — some owned by Frontier — were damaged and needed repair or replacemen­t. At least a few transforme­rs needed to be replaced.

NPU reported that 4,000 remained without power Wednesday morning. By the end of work Wednesday, NPU hoped to have all but 1,000 customers restored to power, with trouble spots and small service outages the last ones to be addressed.

Late Wednesday, NPU crews were expected to focus on removing trees and starting restoratio­n work in the Case Street, Scotland Road and Wightman Avenue areas of Norwich. Some of that work will continue into this morning, NPU spokesman Chris Riley said.

“We understand that customers who have been out of service for several hours can be frustrated with our restoratio­n progress,” Riley said in a press release on the outages. “But it is important to understand that we prioritize this work based on the largest number of customers who will return to service by our addressing an outage.”

Mostly, LaRose said, the response has entailed long hours of working in summer heat and humidity to clear wires from downed trees to allow the utility’s tree-cutting crews, Norwich Public Works teams or hired private contractor­s to remove debris so line crews could repair and rehang wires.

“We’re making sure they’re staying hydrated,” LaRose said. “We tell them ‘get off your feet, take water, take a breather.’”

NPU employees in different divisions are crosstrain­ed to handle storm emergencie­s, with natural gas crews providing support to line crews. Field technician­s were doing advance work by going to scenes of reported damage, taking photos and remaining to secure the scene until line crews arrive. At the South Golden Street headquarte­rs, Geographic Informatio­n System crews were directing traffic, handling customer calls and running the control room.

Since March, NPU crews have been working in segregated cohorts of line crews and supervisor­s to reduce potential COVID-19 exposure. LaRose said the utility has been able to maintain those cohorts during the storm repairs.

NPU, a member of the American Public Power Associatio­n, called in mutual aid from three Massachuse­tts public power companies: Rowley Municipal Lighting, Marblehead Municipal Light Department and Groton Electric Light Department, with a supervisor from Groton, as well.

LaRose said those crews will be paid by their respective utilities, and NPU will reimburse those costs, hoping to be reimbursed by FEMA eventually.

The mutual aid crews were dispatched to the hard-hit Yantic Lane hill area, which LaRose called “a real challenge.” NPU enlisted the help of retired NPU general line foreman Bob Pounch to assist the imported crews.

“They know line work but not our system configurat­ion,” LaRose said.

Norwich City Manager John Salomone praised NPU’s response to the storm, saying customer service takes precedence over the budget issues during a storm emergency.

City officials will have a virtual meeting with FEMA for the initial storm damage assessment, sending photos and GIS informatio­n in lieu of an in-person inspection by the federal agency.

NPU cautioned that any downed wire should be assumed to be energized and a potentiall­y lethal hazard. Report any downed wires to 911 immediatel­y.

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