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vexingsilence t1_j5qljju wrote

Rural maybe, if it doesn't interfere with their ability to upgrade the lines as the population grows. Cities.. that may be a hard sell. Doubt a lot of people would want their yards ripped up just to get the electricity that they already get.

That's all assuming your analysis is correct, which I'm skeptical of.

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AKBigDaddy t1_j5qricx wrote

> Doubt a lot of people would want their yards ripped up just to get the electricity that they already get.

I dunno, a simple "Hey we're going to tear it up, put it back as best we can, but at the end of it you'll have power that will never go down due to weather" I bet the vast majority would be on board.

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vexingsilence t1_j5qsc1u wrote

Doubt it since power outages in the cities are pretty rare. Then how would the street lights work? Have to replace the wood poles with ones with interior wiring? But then the cable/phone/internet and in some cases fire alarm are all hanging on the existing poles. To do it right would be a lot move involved.

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AKBigDaddy t1_j5qtu89 wrote

> But then the cable/phone/internet and in some cases fire alarm are all hanging on the existing poles.

They solved this problem elsewhere... they buried those too, and is also a great way to defray the costs so it's not 100% on the electric company. Maybe ask ATT/comcast to dip into their portion of the $1,000,000,000,000 (yes, 1 TRILLION DOLLARS) that has been given to internet providers to increase broadband availability that never got used appropriately to cover some of the cost?

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vexingsilence t1_j5qufgy wrote

Yea, right. They'd just jack our rates even more. Probably end up in court since the utilities won't look kindly on Eversource trying to pass on some of the costs. And it's not the same phone/cable company throughout the state, to complicate things further.

Or.. you know, just leave the wires on the poles and call it done.

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AKBigDaddy t1_j5rxvzt wrote

Until the next storm and then we re hang them. Those will last until the next storm. And so on

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vexingsilence t1_j5sev2v wrote

You make it sound like everything falls off the poles every storm. They'll fix it. If it's that much of a problem, get a generator.

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AKBigDaddy t1_j5uzk6e wrote

> If it's that much of a problem, get a generator.

What a solution! Instead of everyone paying a few extra dollars on their light bill and improving things for everyone, people should go out and spend $10k+ on a standby generator! Or $1k and only power a few items.

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vexingsilence t1_j5v09de wrote

Precisely. Why do I want to pay anything extra for your comfort and convenience? You chose to live someplace where infrastructure is lacking, you weren't forced to live there. Find a solution with your own money, you're not welcome to mine.

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AKBigDaddy t1_j5w174s wrote

Ok boomer. How does it feel knowing that you, and people like you, are actively making the world a worse place?

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vexingsilence t1_j5w1zdk wrote

Move to a city if you want more reliable electricity. Geniuses like you choose to live in areas that don't have the creature comforts you want, then you bitch about it and try to force the rest of us to pay it.

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AKBigDaddy t1_j5yglkj wrote

I grew up in fucking Alaska, they even figured this shit out. It's assholes like you digging your feet in holding everyone back.

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vexingsilence t1_j5z1nm6 wrote

Move back to Alaska then. Or pay for it yourself. You're not even from around here but you want people to pay to increase the reliability of your electric service? That's some entitlement.

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AKBigDaddy t1_j5z3576 wrote

> Or pay for it yourself.

That's exactly what I'm suggesting, I pay for my portion, you pay for yours, and by everyone pitching in and paying a small portion of it, we all get more reliable power.

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vexingsilence t1_j5z3spi wrote

No, because it will cost a lot more per service point in rural areas than it will in denser city areas. Yet when work like this gets done, the costs tend to be evenly distributed. Besides which, we don't need this in the cities. The power doesn't go out that often. Might be nice for aesthetic reasons but it's not worth the disruption.

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Tullyswimmer t1_j5tiew4 wrote

Except most people know that that would be a complete lie. The powerlines in front of your house are almost never the ones that cause an outage. Outages usually happen upstream when they affect thousands of people.

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AKBigDaddy t1_j5uzd5h wrote

In 5 years in this particular house we've lost power at least a couple days every winter, it has consistently been local lines down due to trees or weather.

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