patching...
Update: Plan your Memorial Day Weekend with Patch traffic and gas. »
Welcome back, Patch Blogger!

Monmouth County Officials Vent Frustations Over JCP&L

Summit held in Tinton Falls for discussion of utility company's service during and after Hurricane Sandy

 

Officials from Monmouth County towns gathered at Tinton Falls Borough Hall on Monday afternoon to discuss and critique Jersey Central Power and Light's (JCP&L) service and communication during Hurricane Sandy. 

Most officials in attendance agreed that JCP&L did not effectively communicate with their towns during the hurricane and that many were left without the information they needed to get out to residents.

"It was absolutely poor execution by JCP&L," Marlboro Mayor Jonathan Hornik said.

"A little anger and venting is exactly what JCP&L needs to hear," Long Branch Mayor Adam Schneider said.

The discussion was hosted by Tinton Falls Mayor Michael Skudera and Middletown Mayor Tony Fiore.

"The goal for today is not for this to become a gripe session," Fiore said. "We wanted to meet, get feedback and go through the proper channels to get this information out."

"This is a utility company that we do not control, so we want to think of what things we can do for the next time this happens," Skudera said.

Fiore outlined some ideas that he had come up with that he felt could improve JCP&L's communication with towns.

  • JCP&L's update calls with mayors should be regional and not statewide;
  • How outages are reported needs to be addressed;
  • A need for better communication between JCP&L and Verizon;
  • JCP&L needs a better understanding of each town's grid;
  • JCP&L needs to know which streets are a priority in town when outages are reported;
  • Towns needs to know what JCP&L's infrastructure improvements are.

The mayors and office of emergency management officials also met to have a round-table discussion about JCP&L, but that part of the meeting was not open to the public or media.

Holmdel Mayor Patrick Impreveduto said whatever decisions were made by the officials should be given to the Monmouth County Board of Chosen Freeholders.

"We need to have them expedite what we are trying to do," Impreveduto said.

Freeholder Tom Arnone agreed and said JCP&L must show its capital plan with the county and municipalities.            

"The JCP&L representatives we talked to had no answers for us," Arnone said.

Related Topics: JCP&L

john cohn

10:21 pm on Tuesday, November 20, 2012

LMAO!!!! there the power company there privately owned loaded and have more lawyers then the who state of NJ . no matter what you say or do there going to do what ever they want to ...fine them and they raise your bill its a loosing battle ...

Reply

Jeff Gollin

12:17 pm on Thursday, November 22, 2012

After an off the cuff conversation I had with a JCPL employee, the impression I had was that Its parent company was prone to saying what government officials wanted to hear, moved new and outdated equipment around from state to state/system to system to make its numbers look good and weren't adverse to massaging its work-in-process numbers to foster the illusion that they were doing more than they were actually doing. Instead of having a central phone number where out of state emergency crews could check in, those crews had to call their own HQs in Texas, Michigan etc. who in turn would funnel info back to JCPL (If true, that's just plain nuts).

One thing that drove me nuts was the daily report of new repairs and total households up for each town. In one instance in Holmdel, the number of homes up and running actually declined by 15%+ from one day to the next. Fair or unfair, it makes you wonder whether JCPL was merely moving numbers around or making them up.

Conclusion - The BPU cannot afford to let JCPL run its own show during emergencies. Legislation and policies must be put in place that keeps JCPL on a short leash and allows government to monitor their activities on a more hands-on, minute to minute basis.

Reply

Leave a comment