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, BCBlazysusan wrote: On Feb 4, 1:27*am, "Brenda Ann" wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... Michael W. "I'm a college professor with a PhD" Bryant wrote: On Feb 3, 8:07 am, dave wrote: If you don't put the wires underground you gotta trim the trees. This is why we pay taxes. Duh...can you possibly be as stupid as you seem? It costs a little over a million dollars to pay for each mile of electrical wires put underground. Hardly cost-efficient in rural farm areas where most of the people without electricity live. To top it off the poles were knocked over by the hurricane that came through last September. Last week was the worst ice storm in Kentucky's history. Two disasters in the last 5 and a half months have left us without the resources to put the electrical lines underground. With a smart guy like you, who lied about having a PhD, Kentucky should have lots of resources (or at least lied about having the resources) to place those lines underground. Instead, your talents are wasted hanging around Louisville Technical Institute. My question is: No matter how many millions it would cost to bury the lines, wouldn't it be ultimately worth it in the end? How many times do they have to repair messes like the current one before the buried lines would be paid for?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - One of the villages here in Cincinnati were built that way. The village is called Mariemont and it is such a pretty village, like stepping back into time. Of course, the well off and affluent live there. The village was designated a historical landmark. Not one power line to be seen there, they are all underground. http://www.mariemont.org/ The power is underground in my neighborhood. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
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