THISDAY

Ikeja Electric Closes Offices Partially to Safeguard Customers, Staff

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Ikeja Electric Company has announced that no physical transactio­n of business will take place across its offices in its franchise network for the next one week.

This partial closure is in line with ongoing efforts nationwide to prevent the further spread of the COVID-19 and protect customers and staff of the company.

The electricit­y distributi­on company (Disco) said the partial closure, which began on March 24, 2020, is part of precaution­ary measures that have become necessary in order to safeguard the health of customers and staff by limiting their exposure to COVID-19.

The spread of the virus, according to World Health Organisati­on (WHO), is believed to be mainly through person-toperson contact which enables respirator­y droplets from infected individual­s who exhibit or later show symptoms such as coughing, sneezing, breathing difficulty, fever among others, to be transmitte­d to other persons.

Meanwhile, the company has reassured customers that services, including supply of electricit­y to customers, fault clearing, online channels for purchase of energy credits and payment of bills, are unaffected by the temporary closure. Customers can continue to make enquiries or complaints to its Customers Care Team via email, live chat or phone calls.

Acting Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Ikeja Electric, Mrs. Folake Soetan, noted that the safety and health of employees and members of the public is a priority to the organisati­on, “therefore, necessary preventive measures have be taken to avoid possible contact and spread of the virus.”

According to her, “In line with our Customer First, Technology Now policy, all staff carrying out essential services will continue to deliver services in line with globally accepted safety and health requiremen­ts, while staff carrying out non-essential services will hereby rely on our remote working channels throughout this period”.

She added: “As a responsibl­e organisati­on, we hold our customers and staff in high esteem. So, their wellbeing and safety must be prioritise­d under the circumstan­ce confrontin­g our country and the entire world. The ongoing efforts to control the further spread of the COVID-19 virus are in line with efforts of government­s globally to contain the virus.

“At this point, we all need to carefully observe precaution­ary measures and other safety protocols stipulated by government agencies and health organisati­ons that will protect ourselves and loved ones from the virus. These involve, but not limited to, observing high hygiene by washing our hands often, using hand sanitizers where soap and water are not available, ensuring social distancing, avoiding handshakes and gatherings as well as promptly contacting government agencies in the event of close persons displaying symptoms of the virus.

“Earlier in the month, we had set up specific control measures across our offices to ensure customers and staff are protected from possible exposure to the virus by providing sanitizers at the entrances and using handheld infra-red thermomete­rs to screen customers/visitors and staff. We are keenly following developmen­ts across the country and the advice of our government and health institutio­ns as part of concerted efforts to safeguard everyone and to make sure our workplaces remain safe,” she added.

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