Social Networks We Use

Facebook Twitter

CT Tech Junkie Feed

Podcast | Mark Lassoff of LearnToProgram.TV
May 21, 2012 9:38 pm
Mark Lassoff is the founder of LearnToProgram.TV, a Vernon-based company offering online programming training classes...more »
Better Safe Than Sorry: SpaceX Resets Launch for Tuesday After Split Second Abort
May 19, 2012 5:53 am
SpaceX announced it will try to launch the first commercial flight to the International Space Station at 3:22 a.m....more »
CBIA Cyber-Challenge Enters Third Year | Podcast
May 12, 2012 9:28 pm
The CBIA Education Foundation is hosting its third Cyber-Challenge presentation event at the Connecticut Science...more »

Tag List

ANALYSIS | Lessons Learned from Irene

by Heath W. Fahle | Sep 2, 2011 1:21pm
(2) Comments | Commenting has expired
Posted to: Opinion, Weather

Auto-login on future visits

Forgot your password?

Sitting in the dark is fun – for a while. But as thousands of Connecticut families have found this week, it is quickly trumped by the desire for a hot shower, clean clothes, and conversations that aren’t shouted over din of a generator. But Irene left more than a tattered electricity grid and reshaped coastline. She exposed some truths about Connecticut that would not be otherwise apparent.

In the hours after the storm passed through the state, many residents emerged from their homes to find roads closed by downed trees, tangled power lines, and rising water. Some communities waited (and some are still waiting) for local authorities to address the problems caused by Irene. Yet in conversations since the storm, it is striking how many people tell similar stories about the neighborhood armies that spontaneously formed to begin the cleanup process.

Armed with chain saws and wheelbarrows, men and women of all ages assembled to cut away the trees that blocked roadways and rescue people from rushing waters and storm-damaged houses. In the days that followed, this sense of community took on other unusual forms like space in a freezer or pool water repurposed for the toilet.

At a time when a majority of the state’s political figures assert that independent groups of people cannot do big things without centralized planning and a politicized bureaucratic process, many neighborhoods proved they can.

The big corporate and government bureaucracies would do well to take this lesson and build on it. The town of Ledyard’s First Selectman, Fred Allyn, hit on this point when talking to reporters earlier in the week about Connecticut Light & Power, noting that CL&P ought to send a supervisor to trouble spots and advise locals about what is safe to clear so they can move the process forward themselves. 

Most homeowners and business owners across Connecticut make out their check each month to one of the state’s two primary utilities –Connecticut Light & Power or United Illuminating. The bills are usually a byzantine mishmash of acronyms, calculations, and legalese assembled to coax more money out of your pocket. But most residents would happily pay their electric bill if it meant no more nights alone in the darkness.

The storm highlighted how CL&P and UI good they are about keeping customers informed as well as how far they have left to go. While CL&P’s interactive map on their website was a key resource for many, getting hard information about when each person’s power would be restored was, well, hard to get.

In the longer run, the power restoration process makes evident the pressing need for alternative electricity solutions. Moving to a distributed generation model in which houses and businesses would generate and use their own electricity via solar panels, windmills, fuel cells, or other means would eliminate dependence on the macrogrid for power. After the week’s long outages, wholesale reliance on CL&P, UI, or anyone else for power seems misguided.
Irene was a reminder that communities can still work together to take on big challenges and the sense of common purpose is alive and well in Connecticut’s neighborhoods. Governments and corporations would be wise to learn that lesson about the society they serve.

Heath W. Fahle is the Policy Director of the Yankee Institute for Public Policy and a former Executive Director of the Connecticut Republican Party. Contact Heath about this article by visiting www.heathwfahle.com

Tags: , , ,

Share this story with others.

Share |

(2) Comments

posted by: ... | September 3, 2011  8:48am

...

Phenomenal analysis Heath. We may not be fully ready for any storm like this, but leading people to self-serving energy sources that you list off are what CT residents, and citizens across the country should strongly invest in and lobby.

posted by: GoatBoyPHD | September 4, 2011  8:11pm

GoatBoyPHD

From the Courant during the 2002 Ice Storm.

Similar story.

http://tinyurl.com/3ebe7x2

Apparently it helps to inconvenience schools and businesses on a Holiday weekend on the shore.