Community Corner

CL&P to Send More Crews to Meriden Wednesday [With Video]

Connecticut Light and Power will quadruple previous efforts after meeting with legislators and city officials Tuesday night.

Connecticut Light and Power (CL&P) will send 12 crews to the City of Meriden to work on restoring power Wednesday, state Sen. Len Suzio (R-Meriden) said late Tuesday night – up from the three the company reportedly had working in town on Tuesday.

The announcement comes after city legislators and CL&P officials held what some characterized as a "tense" meeting at Meriden's Emergency Operations Center Tuesday evening to discuss the city's rate of restoration – one that Meriden City Manager Lawrence Kendzior has publicly criticized as . At 9:41 p.m. on Tuesday, 79 percent of Meriden was without power for a third full day, down from 83 percent that afternoon.

Press was not allowed into the 6 p.m. meeting, but some of those in attendence briefed reporters afterwards.

Find out what's happening in Meridenwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

CL&P officials reportedly told the group that it anticipated 99 percent of the state would have power by Sunday, more than a full week after Storm Alfred knocked down trees and powerlines throughout the East Coast.

Meriden officials stressed to CL&P reps that the more than 20,000 residences and businesses without power in Meriden merited a greater response from the utility company, according to state Rep. Chris Donovan (D-Meriden) following the meeting. Donovan, whose own home in Meriden is currently without power, organized the meeting. [Click on the video for some of Donovan's statements following the meeting.]

Find out what's happening in Meridenwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

"Apparently we are one third of the customers in this Cheshire area...and we haven't been getting that proportion of crews into this area," Donovan said, of the 9 towns in the "Cheshire Region" that includes Meriden. During the meeting, CL&P reportedly promised that at least 6 crews would be in the city Wednesday, and possibly more if crews from other states were certain to come in. "I want 30 crews here tomorrow, not six, I want 30," Donovan said.

CL&P offered explanations as to why there has been so few crews working in the city Tuesday following the meeting – especially as compared with August's Tropical Storm Irene. According to Jim Muntz, President for Transmission for Northeast Utilities, it's a basic manpower issue.

Crews from nearby states came to Connecticut to assist with operations following Irene, but this time around, the winter storms affected their states as well – so help has had to come from further away, Munz said.

The damage was also worse than this summer's tropical storm, according to Tom Dorsey, Manager of Government Affairs at CL&P.

"The damage is five times greater than what was caused by Irene," Dorsey said. "This is the largest event in the history of the company."


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