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Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Report: Cause of Connecticut Ave. Water Main Break Still Unknown

The fiber optic monitoring system meant to warn WSSC of impending breaks in the water main did not fail, WSSC engineers said, Bethesda Now reported.

  Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission engineers still do not know what caused the massive water main break on March 18 at the intersection of Connecticut Avenue and Chevy Chase Lake Drive, but they say that the fiber optic monitoring system installed in the pipes in 2010 did not fail, Bethesda Now reported. The monitoring system detects only the sounds of snapping steel wires in the concrete pipes, but as the steel wires did not snap before the break, the monitoring system could not detect the impending break, WSSC chief engineer Gary Gumm told the Montgomery County Council’s Transportation and Environment Committee on Monday morning, Bethesda Now added. But, "[that] is a distinction however that has very little comfort to our …

Friday, April 5, 2013

WSSC Proposes 7.25 Percent Rate Increase

Montgomery County Council's Transportation, Infrastructure, Energy and Environment Committee reviews the request on Monday morning.

  The Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission is proposing a 7.25 percent rate increase for water and sewer use in Montgomery County, according to a news release from the county council's office. On Monday, April 15, at 9:30 a.m., the Montgomery County Council's Transportation, Infrastructure, Energy and Environment Committee, chaired by Council Member Roger Berliner, will review WSSC's operating budget request. Council Members Nancy Floreen and Hans Riemer are also on the committee. The budget request comes as an investigation examines the cause of a massive water main break on Connecticut Avenue in Chevy Chase on March 18. Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission engineers still do not know what caused the break, but they say that the …

Saturday, March 23, 2013

Repairs to Massive Water Main Break Nearly Done

WSSC hopes to have the repaired line back in service by the end of the weekend.

  Repairs to the 60-inch-in-diameter water main that burst Monday night on Connecticut Avenue in Chevy Chase are nearly complete. A new pipe section was put in place Thursday, and the grout in the pipe joints cured overnight. Early Friday morning, Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission crews "slowly opened a valve to begin filling the isolated stretch of pipe," according to a statement on the WSSC website. On Friday, WSSC crews were slated to "[flush] the repaired line during the day, which is part of the standard decontamination process to ensure water quality, before putting the transmission main back into service," the statement said. The Acoustic Fiber Optic monitoring system was re-installed yesterday, The Washington Post reported. …

Monday, January 14, 2013

Assistant County Attorney Tasked with Utility Issues

In the wake of Pepco's most recent request for permission to raise electricity rates, the county tasked an assistant county attorney to focus solely on utility issues.

Montgomery County now has an in-house attorney dedicated to utility issues. "[Lawyer] Lisa Brennan moved from the Office of Consumer Protection, where she dealt frequently with utility issues, to the Office of the County Attorney where utilities will now dominate her time," Montgomery County spokesman Patrick Lacefield told The Gazette. So far, the county has hired outside attorneys as well as using in-house ones to fight against Pepco's rate increase requests. Dedicating one in-house attorney to utility issues, rather than paying for outside counsel, should save the county some money, The Gazette reported.  The county's move to consolidate its efforts to ensure that county residents are paying fair prices for quality utilities comes in …

MaryJane

10:37 pm on Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Educate yourself on all the reasons why having more RF radiation is anything but Smart! Opt out, write your legislators! /http://marylandsmartmeterawareness.org   more ›

Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Pepco Required to Provide Smart Meter 'Opt-Out' Plan

Just what the opt-out option will be is still undecided, according to the Maryland Public Service Commission.

Marylanders less-than-thrilled at the thought of having smart meters in their homes might appreciate news from the Maryland Public Service Commission on Monday: The commission is requiring Pepco to give customers an alternative to smart meters—devices that send radio signals about a household’s electricity usage to Pepco. Just what that alternative will be is not yet settled, but the commission has narrowed the list down to two "opt-out" options: The commission will be holding proceedings to determine which alternative should go into effect, but in the meantime, Pepco customers who previously told the utility company that they did not want smart meters on their properties (this was allowed via an interim order from the commission in May) "…

Judy Fiml

5:06 pm on Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Question. Might sound simple,but how would this affect my furnace? The earlier Energy saver blew out the control board on my furnace...and, charge me more than you already do for reading my power? Anything else you can charge me for! ??   more ›

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Protests Begin Against Pepco's Most Recent Rate Increase Request

Seven Montgomery County Council members call the rate increase request "suspect, unwarranted and unjustified."

Little more than a week has passed since Pepco filed its most recent rate increase request (for $60.8 million) with the Maryland Public Service Commission, and the protests have begun already. Town of Somerset Council Member Cathy Pickar proposed that the Somerset Council write a letter of protest to the PSC to say that the town council is opposed to the rate increase, which Pickar described as "regulatory ransom." "[This rate increase suggests that] if you want improvement, you pay for it first." The rate increase—the second that Pepco has filed this year—has two parts to it, Patch reported last week: (A "typical" residential customer is one who uses approximately 1,000 kilowatt hours a month, Pepco said.) "There’s no question that we are…

art slesinger

6:27 pm on Tuesday, December 11, 2012

When not being watched, they dropped the ball. Now they want a preapproved rate increases for work yet to happen. That seems inappropriate and that is why we have the utility regulated by the PSC. They can come to the PSC as they complete this compelling work.   more ›

Friday, November 30, 2012

Pepco Requests $60.8M Base Distribution Rate Increase

Pepco also requested additional funds to accelerate reliability improvements.

If Pepco's most recent rate increase request is approved by the Maryland Public Service Commission, typical residential customers could pay $7.13 more a month in electricity bills. The 4.98 percent increase (based on a typical residential customer using 1,000 kilowatt hours a month) would happen only if the PSC approves Pepco's request—made on Friday—for a $60.8 million increase in base distribution rates, according to a Pepco statement. The increase would pay for improvements that Pepco is in the process of making to its distribution system. The improvements—which began in 2010—appear to be working: By 2011, Maryland customers receiving electricity from upgraded feeders experienced 58 percent fewer outages and a 69 percent decrease in the…

Valdecyr Alves

8:34 pm on Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Meanwhile, if anyone would like to know how I'm helping my Pepco customers to get their money back by saving significantly with Free Energy credits applied directly to their bill, don't hesitate to contact me. See picture uploaded for example. Val Alves 443-832-3711   more ›

Friday, November 16, 2012

Pepco Intros New Streetlight Outage Reporting Map

The new Bing map makes it easy to report streetlight outages.

  The next time you spot a burned-out streetlight, try Pepco's new upgraded online streetlight outage reporting system. It's an easy system to use. At the "Report a Streetlight or Area Light Problem" page of Pepco's website, one may enter in the streetlight pole's number or an address in the vicinity of the streetlight, and one will be presented with a Bing map indicating where all of the streetlights are located in that area. Hover the cursor over the green dot representing the streetlight that is out, and one will get a pop-up menu with a link allowing one to "click here to report a problem for this light." "Once a streetlight problem is reported, the new reporting system sends the customer an email with a tracking number, location and …

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