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2002-09-26_PWETC_AgendaPacket
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2002-09-26_PWETC_AgendaPacket
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Last modified
3/22/2010 2:55:45 PM
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6/14/2005 12:19:00 PM
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Commission/Committee
Commission/Authority Name
Public Works Commission
Commission/Committee - Document Type
Agenda/Packet
Commission/Committee - Meeting Date
9/26/2002
Commission/Committee - Meeting Type
Regular
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<br />A City Decides <br />To Bury Its <br />Power Lines <br /> <br />POWER IS GOING underground in <br />Leesburg, Florida. This Lake County city <br />is the first in the state to decide to move <br />all its electric lines below street level. The <br />shift from an aboveground to an under- <br />ground system will take 30 years to com- <br />plete. <br />Part of the decision to bury the lines <br />was fiscal. Maintenance of the above- <br />ground lines runs to more than $1 million <br />annually. A 20-year plan for the electric <br />system showed that replacements to the <br />electric infrastructure, including poles and <br />old conductors, comprise most of the <br />work the aboveground system would need <br />during the next several years. <br /> <br />According to Lloyd Shank, the city's <br />director of electric and gas, the base cost <br />of replacing aging lines above ground is <br />about $130,000 per mile compared with <br />about $160,000 per mile to set up the lines <br />underground. Meanwhile, aboveground <br />lines, especially in a hurricane-prone state <br />such as Florida, experience more frequent <br />power outages. "If you throw in the cost <br />of outages and continuing maintenance, <br />underground is less expensive," Shank <br />says. <br />There were also aesthetic reasons. The <br />existing power lines interfere with the <br />city's beloved live oak trees, which must <br />be carefully trimmed around the lines. <br />In designing the underground system, <br />the city recognized that it can be more dif- <br />ficult to repair buried lines when problems <br />crop up: It can take hours to pinpoint a <br />failure, dig to its location and fix it. So <br />Leesburg is building a loop system, which <br />feeds power lines from two directions <br /> <br />and substantially reduces repair time. <br />Leesburg's initial plan is to spend about <br />$1 million a year on the project. As costs <br />for aboveground maintenance drop, those <br />dollars will be funneled into the under- <br />ground transfer. -Michele Mariani <br /> <br /> <br /> 'TI ;::;: <br /> ...,. <br /> "" CD <br /> 0 a. <br /> 3 0' <br /> G5 '< <br /> s:: <br /> 0 <br /> < III <br /> CD '< <br /> "" 0 <br /> :l "" <br />VJ :l ^ <br /><C '< <br />= (J> <br />l ...... '< <br />r 0 '< <br />(Xl () <br />..... N <br />0 '< <br /> f\) :l <br /> ~ <br />
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