Sigarms
Super Star Member
When the power company needs to move or replace a pole and there is communication wire of some sort on that pole, how does the power company not know who has wire running off their power pole?
Long story at the new home we're renovating.
What the power company is telling me is that they may have to replace a pole, but they can't move the communication wire that isn't theirs off the old pole and put it on the new pole, so we'd have two power poles standing side by side.
I'm dealing with an engineer who seems like a nice guy, but at the end of the day, he really doesn't care about this issue.
I asked him that knowing they're the large power company that it only makes sense that they charge others to run communication wire on their poles, and he said yes, they do. Then ask him if they receive payment for use of their poles, why they wouldn't know who owns the communication wire? Basically not his department.
We've called pretty much everyone we can think of, and found one, Spectrum. They removed two wires, but we still have two unknown wires to deal with. Hoping to find out who on our end, but I have to plan worse case scenario.
Here is the kicker... I ask this engineer what happens if a car comes in off the road and takes the current power pole down (it's old and ugly, and honestly may not pass their "integrity set of criteria anyways). Apparently they will put in a new pole, put the power lines on that pole, but leave any wires that aren't their laying on the ground, and who ever wire it is will have to place their wires on the new pole. Perhaps it's just me, but this is kind of defying any common sense here.
Long story at the new home we're renovating.
What the power company is telling me is that they may have to replace a pole, but they can't move the communication wire that isn't theirs off the old pole and put it on the new pole, so we'd have two power poles standing side by side.
I'm dealing with an engineer who seems like a nice guy, but at the end of the day, he really doesn't care about this issue.
I asked him that knowing they're the large power company that it only makes sense that they charge others to run communication wire on their poles, and he said yes, they do. Then ask him if they receive payment for use of their poles, why they wouldn't know who owns the communication wire? Basically not his department.
We've called pretty much everyone we can think of, and found one, Spectrum. They removed two wires, but we still have two unknown wires to deal with. Hoping to find out who on our end, but I have to plan worse case scenario.
Here is the kicker... I ask this engineer what happens if a car comes in off the road and takes the current power pole down (it's old and ugly, and honestly may not pass their "integrity set of criteria anyways). Apparently they will put in a new pole, put the power lines on that pole, but leave any wires that aren't their laying on the ground, and who ever wire it is will have to place their wires on the new pole. Perhaps it's just me, but this is kind of defying any common sense here.