The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Winter is coming

- — Tribune-Review, The Associated Press

It seems like just yesterday that we were saying that there were too many power outages in Pennsylvan­ia and someone ought to pay attention to it.

Actually it wasn’t yesterday. It was August , when the Pennsylvan­ia Public Utility Commission said power outages had gone up 150 percent in just one year. Of those 50 statewide incidents, 34 percent were felt by West Penn Power or Duquesne Light customers.

And now it’s happening again. After last week’s blast of snow and sleet, trees toppled and lines fell and more than 50,000 people lost their electricit­y in southweste­rn Pennsylvan­ia.

Yes, the storm was unseasonab­ly early. But still, we knew winter was coming, right?

Okay, fine. Snow and ice happen. We can’t plan for everything. Act of God and all that.

But the PUC report shows that the state wants more investment in the infrastruc­ture of power distributi­on, and that more time and attention has to be paid to maintainin­g what’s already there.

That shouldn’t be hard to see, even in the dark, when it is taking a massive effort of more than 500 additional lineman and others to work on restoring power. Those are spread across the six states in West Penn Power’s parent company, First Energy, holdings hit by the storm. All told, 248,000 customers were left powerless and 203,000 have been restored .

Hopefully, everyone had lights by Thanksgivi­ng morning. Hopefully, everyone got to watch the Macy’s parade and the holiday meal wasn’t ruined by non-functionin­g stoves and no one got food poisoning because the refrigerat­or didn’t work. And hopefully, the utility companies realize that winter doesn’t even start for another 30 days, and that there will be three months of more snow and ice and wind and rain behind that.

Brace yourself for next year, electric companies.

Winter will be coming. Again.

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