{"id":315,"date":"2024-04-11T16:06:06","date_gmt":"2024-04-11T16:06:06","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/lopks.online\/?p=315"},"modified":"2024-04-17T13:04:13","modified_gmt":"2024-04-17T13:04:13","slug":"letters-xcels-high-wind-power-shutdown-prevented-wildfires-and-saved-lives-or-inconvenienced-thousands-to-avoid-lawsuits","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/lopks.online\/index.php\/2024\/04\/11\/letters-xcels-high-wind-power-shutdown-prevented-wildfires-and-saved-lives-or-inconvenienced-thousands-to-avoid-lawsuits\/","title":{"rendered":"Letters: Xcel\u2019s high wind power shutdown \u2014 prevented wildfires and saved lives or inconvenienced thousands to avoid lawsuits?"},"content":{"rendered":"

High winds, fire danger: Could Xcel do more to prevent power outages?<\/h4>\n

Re: “Extreme winds fuel fire, outages,” April 7 news story and “Xcel\u2019s preemptive shutdown criticized<\/a>,” April 9 news story<\/p>\n

In response to complaints about Xcel proactively cutting off electricity to 55,000 Front Range customers during our windy weekend, would you rather take your chances with a devastating fire?<\/p>\n

Those who say that Xcel has done this to avoid lawsuits are only seeing half the issue \u2013 lawsuits would follow loss from wildfire.<\/p>\n

Is having electricity every minute of every day more important than whether wind-driven wildfire burns your house (or someone else\u2019s) to the ground, as we saw in the Marshall fire?<\/p>\n

Weather forecasting is imperfect at best. I consult 3 weather apps, which base their predictions on the same National Weather Service data — they often disagree. I think Xcel made the right call with the information available.<\/p>\n

Nancy B. Weil, Denver<\/em><\/p>\n

I live in north Boulder and I am one of the 55,000 Xcel customers whose electricity was shut off from 3:02 p.m. Saturday, April 6, until 4:24 p.m. on Sunday, April 7. Interestingly, the houses immediately one block west of me and in the neighborhood west of me did not lose their power. I received two phone calls from Xcel giving me a heads up, which allowed me to at least fully charge my electronics, but I really didn’t believe it would happen because we didn’t have any power poles or transformers in our neighborhood. I was wrong.<\/p>\n

Xcel claims that this preventative de-energizing action is not the result of the lawsuits from the Marshall fire. I find that hard to believe. The smart preventative measures that Xcel needs to do and should have been doing for these many years are investing manpower and money into upgrading the electric infrastructure. Isn’t that why we pay our bills? Will I now have to be concerned during the summer months that my electricity will be cut off when there is a high wind warning together with high fire danger? I can tell you that Xcel’s website was not informative regarding the resumption of power this time, and I don’t expect it to be so for any future shutdowns.<\/p>\n

The PUC better stop approving rate hikes and look at how Xcel is not providing consistent electricity to their customers.<\/p>\n

Teri Jacobson, Boulder<\/em><\/p>\n

Downed power lines sparking fires, high winds blowing embers everywhere, trees and shingles catching fire, blowing embers creating more fires and windblown embers: disaster! On my block, a downed utility pole tangled in two trees. But the line was de-energized, so no sparks, no fires.<\/p>\n