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The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here.
©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Power
and portable phones go out at BBR Power
outages are not unusual in the Sisters area, but one on Monday, June 16,
coincided with a rash of residential telephone failures.
That caused consternation
not only for the residents of Black Butte Ranch, where the dual problem
occurred, but for Qwest Telephone Company officials, Central Electric
Co-op engineers, and even the management and emergency service personnel
at Black Butte Ranch.
Why did the phones go out
when the power went off?
Stacey Dahl, public information
officer for Qwest, said that the phone company has its own power for operating
residential telephones, "sending low wattage power down the telephone
lines so that when there is a major power outage, our phones are not affected.
They still operate," she said.
Dahl said that she had no
explanation, nor did their service people, for what happened in the Sisters/Black
Butte Ranch area.
Susanna Klosterman, spokesperson
for the Black Butte Police Department, said that their backup generator
went on automatically, "when the power went out. We had all our services
working," she said.
"Of course, we had the battery
operated radios in our police cars and our cell phones. We were always
in contact with the 911 services so we were still able to cover any emergency."
One of the tangent circumstances
occurring with the power failure was that the electric gates to the residential
area of Black Butte Ranch became inoperable and cars were backed up waiting
to get in until maintenance personnel physically removed the barriers
many minutes after the power failure.
This opened the gated community
to any and all who wanted to enter, voiding the normal security system.
Sharon Sowa, Administrative
Assistant at the Black Butte Ranch Fire Department, said the department
has emergency backup and was "never out of touch with anyone needing service.
Our generators and back-up batteries worked fine," she said.
But what about those residents
who lost telephone service? How did that happen? The answer was elusive.
What would those residents without phone service have done if they needed
emergency help, even if the emergency agencies were operating?
The answer came from a staff
member at Central Electric Cooperative.
"We knew we were down at Black
Butte Ranch from 3:30 in the afternoon to 7:15 that night," said Jim Crowell,
member services director of CEC.
"But what we couldn't figure
is why our power outage had anything to do with the phones going out,"
he said.
In talking about this mystery
among staff members at the power company, one person suggested that if
the phones in question were the "walk-around kind," the cradle or base
of the phone unit would be powered by CEC through a wall plug and when
the power went out, the base, which acts as a radio receiver, would be
shut off.
"With so many homes now having
walk-around telephones," Crowell said, "without house power there would
be no receiver to which the portable phone could send it's single. Without
power to the base, the phone won't work."
That was the reason so many
homes lost phone service when they lost power service. Most homes in and
around Black Butte Ranch now have multiple, portable telephones. It apparently
had nothing to do with the telephone company.
A solution to this relatively
new condition of house powered telephones came from Jack Croll, former
head of the Black Butte Ranch Police Board: "Every home should have at
least one hard-lined phone. That is, a non-portable unit plugged directly
into the phone line, or a cell phone that operates without external power
just in case of an emergency during a power outage," he said. |
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