City prepares for summertime energy emergencies
Tariq Malik
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- City officials are meeting with the Southern
California Edison Co. in hopes of honing reaction and preparation time
during Stage 3 energy emergencies this summer.
“We want as much information as they can provide us so when or if
there is a blackout, we have adequate resources,” said Rich Barnard, the
city’s spokesman. “That way we can make sure we’re doing our job and
assisting the public.”
The state’s Public Utilities Committee, he added, issued an order
earlier this year directing Edison to meet with Huntington Beach
officials, and its Northern California counterpart Pacific Gas & Electric
Co. to meet with San Francisco officials. Both cities complained that
rolling blackout warnings were neither specific, nor early enough, to be
effective.
Representatives from Edison and the city have already met once to
discuss Stage 3 notification procedures, and a second meeting is in the
planning stages. Results from the discussions will then be presented in a
report to the state commission, city officials said.
“I expect a lot of this has to do with the information [on Stage 3
emergencies] that’s available through Independent System Operator, how
soon we get it and if there’s a reasonable time to get that information
to respective cities,” said Jerry Dominguez, Edison’s general manager.
“Normally, that’s about 15 minutes.”
The California Independent System Operator manages the flow of
electricity along the long-distance, high-voltage power lines that
comprise most of the state’s energy transmission system.
Because talks are still ongoing, Dominguez added, additional details
are confidential.
City officials said they only hope to improve the communication
between Edison and Huntington Beach, in order to more efficiently
distribute the resources required.
“We have portable trailer generators that tie right into our sewer
lift stations to power them during blackouts,” said Robert Beardsley, the
city’s director of public works. “We need to know exactly where the
electricity is out, and when, so we can send a generator to take over the
job.”
Other problems such as the termination of a Stage 3 alert not making
its way back to the city, therefore causing hours of unneeded
preparations and overtime, have also cropped up, city officials added.
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