It does make you wonder about the electrical infrastructure of the island, and how much work is being done to repair it. With the Texas and Florida hurricanes you saw fleets of electrical service vehicles (boom trucks and the like) from other power companies with joint agreements waiting to deploy into the disaster area as soon as it was safe to do so. With PR.... well, it's not like you can drive to the island, much less (apparently) around on it. Getting those vehicles and people in, assuming joint agreements with off island power companies existed in the first place, would be a case of scheduling and determining priorities. And for those crying that the US Federal Gov't ought to do it - where do you think they're going to find the people? It's not like they have armies of infrastructure level electricians just sitting around playing cards until needed for an emergency - these are the sort of people who, by and large, are already working at jobs - where they are needed as well. When it comes to infrastructure it seems like PR has been knocked back to the "tools to make tools" stage - they need to build the infrastructure to rebuild their infrastructure, which was apparently in no great shape to begin with. On Thu, Oct 19, 2017 at 12:06 PM, Jean-Francois Mezei < jfmezei_nanog@vaxination.ca> wrote:
On 2017-10-19 03:00, Sean Donelan wrote:
not intended for long-term, continuous use. The generators will need maintenance and likely experience unscheduled failures the longer they're used.
Permanent duty diesel generators exist. Many northern communities in Canada run on them as their 7/24 power source.
It *shouldn't* have taken long after Maria for locals to know how much damage there had been to electrical grid and that if it's gonna take months to fix, you're gonna need constant duty generators.
What isn't clear to me is whether everything still depends on FEMA/army help, or whether business is able to function autonomously and get their own generators without the army confiscating them to be delieved to a hospital instead.
And if you're a telco who is deprived of revenues because almost all your customers are without power, do you spend your own money and effort to try to get a permanent duty diesel generator to maintain your central office, or do you wait for government to install one for you ?
It is one thing to be benevolent and wanting to have your network backbone up, but financial realities of the cost of running a business without revenues will eventually hit you when the disaster lasts for months instead of days.
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