SHAME ON SCE

 

images

 

Only two posts since Memorial Day, a long week in-between as my energy and enthusiasm for the blog wanes. As we begin Week 4 of calf-weaning that entails gathering the cattle, sorting cows, then hauling cull cows and calves out of the mountains, feeding the calves twice-a-day for a week in the corrals before taking them to town, I’m wearing down.

Robbin arrived yesterday morning, after a week in Madera with her mother who is not doing well, to NO electricity and NO water. Seeing each other only on the weekends this past month, I left early Saturday to change my water on the irrigated pasture, feed the calves and run the sprinklers in the corrals to keep the dust down, hoping to have a late cup of coffee and welcome time with Robbin. Around 8:00 a.m. the sprinklers quit.

I went to the pump expecting a problem like bugs between the points of the pressure switch or bad capacitor, only to find I had no juice to the breaker switch. Assuming a vehicle altercation with a power pole that would soon be rectified, I left to see if Clarence needed any help getting a reluctant bull in. When we returned, still no juice and no water for fifty dusty calves. On the way home I checked the Bequette corrals’ brand-new Smart meter only to find a blank screen there.

With no electricity at home at noon, we called SCE to learn they had shut the power off for a scheduled maintenance to which we were supposedly given notice. Our lights began to flicker at 2:00 p.m., however we still had no water at the house. Unfamiliar with the code, ‘not Sync’ on house pump’s new Smart meter, I called SCE to find out if the problem was with SCE or our pump and electrical equipment. The sweet girl on the other end of the phone didn’t know anything about the code and promised to send a man out. I left to feed the calves again and check to see if the pump at the corrals was running, knowing I’d be back before the repairman arrived, as I mulled over all the possible electrical issues driving down the road, so angry I steamed past the hay I needed from the barn. After a U-turn and self-lecture regarding the ineffective futility of becoming so furious and overwrought, I was pleased to see the calves had water. On the way home, I visualized the location of all the tools and items I needed to solve our house pump problems.

240 volts to the breakers, but nothing out the other end. I replaced the breakers. Juice to the pressure switch and juice to the electrical pump box, but no juice to the capacitors. I pressed the reset button and Voilà: the submersible pump began to hum at 5:00 p.m.

The repairman arrived just before dark to inform me that ours was the third breaker issue due to the shut down, and furthermore, no one on Dry Creek Road remembered receiving any notice from SCE. This morning, Robbin and I addressed new issues with our refrigerator, and I suppose we’ll get used to the new dark cloud on our TV screen.

In the old days, we knew our local SCE representative personally, but like government, the hands-on people have been replaced by Smart meters and bureaucrats. What white-collar genius decided to turn the electricity off without warning during two years of drought? If this is progress and a sign of things to come, I don’t want anymore.

Shame on SCE, another insulated corporate screw-up!

7 responses to “SHAME ON SCE

  1. Sounds like you need a trip to Victoria in the cool North.

    Like

  2. Hang in there, Dofflemyers!
    We’ve still got electricity up on South Fork (for now anyway), so come on up if you need some. Stay as cool as you can.

    Like

  3. It is an outrage about the power company, one you and anybody can ill afford.

    Don’t let the blog wear you down – there is an ebb and flow, but you know that. I nearly abandoned mine in the closing weeks of winter here, tapered back, took stock lest I lose my voice, or – worse – lest it go astray.

    I am but one reader here, and I don’t read any blogs daily due to life and whatnot, but would miss your exquisite poetry were you to entirely go silent.

    Like

  4. SCE, AT&T, IRS, all the same – nameless, faceless, way too much power over our lives.

    Like

  5. Trying times John…. corporate twats the lot of ’em, with no concept of the downline affect 😦

    We get power outages pretty well daily for an hour or so, much more in the winter. Here we also get maintenance work usually on a Sunday, from 7am till mid afternoon, and they give no notice at all (and are not required to). If the power goes ‘on the hour’, we call the central line to discover if we are on the list for a scheduled all day outage 😦 The terms ‘customer’ and ‘service’ haven’t filtered to this part of the world… but in the US you’d think they’d have it all sussed out in the year 2014!!

    As for the blog, know where you are coming from. It’s a chore at times, but I for one really enjoy your work, even if not that regular. Just do as feels right for you – that’s all that matters 🙂

    Best regards, SPIKE

    Like

  6. Sorry to hear you had that experience. I relate to the bizarre feeling of fury at “service providers” fronted with perfectly pleasant agents who are forced to protect those salaried decision-makers flipping the switches that really matter. The gap continues to widen in the U. S. of A. –Paul

    Like

Leave a reply to Uncle Spike Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.