Published
By MYRNA M. VELASCO
As electricity service
restoration hasn’t been met as targeted, the National Electrification
Administration (NEA) announced that it would be deploying line workers in
Western Visayas areas served by electric cooperatives (ECs) walloped by recent
typhoon “Ursula.”
One of the main areas
to be given reinforcement will be Aklan Electric Cooperative (AKELCO), which
NEA Administrator Edgardo Masongsong described to have been “badly hit” by that
extreme weather condition ravaging the country’s middle core region on
Christmas day.
He said additional line
workers will be deployed and mobilized in Aklan “to assist with the continuing
power restoration,” emphasizing that “additional 58 line workers will be
helping AKELCO in the effort to restore power.”
The other electric cooperatives to be aided by the reinforced contingent of
line workers would be the Cebu I to III Electric Cooperatives (CEBECO I, II and
III), the Bohol I and II Electric Cooperatives; and the Negros Oriental II
Electric Cooperative.
As indicated by NEA,
there are already “430 linemen and support personnel working around the
province of Aklan to turn the lights back on after the storm.”
Despite what has been
observed as slow-paced restoration of electricity service, Masongsong rated the
works being carried out at the typhoon-hit areas as “doing well,” with him
highlighting the extra support they have been receiving from local barangay
electricians and contractors, as well as that of the Philippine Rural Electric
Cooperatives Association Inc. (PHILRECA); and those of various regional
organizations from Visayas and Mindanao.
And given that the promised timeline already lapsed as to when power shall be
brought back to the affected areas, Masongsong just opted to appeal for
“understanding and patience as to the pace of the restoration works.”
He maintained that “the
line crews in the field have been working round-the-clock and doing everything
to restore the power as soon as possible.”
The NEA chief stressed “we understand the frustrations of our member-consumers who are still without electricity after the typhoon but we also have to consider the realities on the ground.”
The NEA chief stressed “we understand the frustrations of our member-consumers who are still without electricity after the typhoon but we also have to consider the realities on the ground.”
Masongsong further
pleaded to the local communities “to support the ECs and their line workers and
personnel in carrying out basic tasks, such as collecting rocks to reinforce
utility poles in their areas or clearing the vegetation, which caused the
falling of the poles during the typhoon.”
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