The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

$5M power upgrade will cost 40 trees

- By Evan Brandt ebrandt@21st-centurymed­ia.com @PottstownN­ews on Twitter

PECO has begun a $5 million upgrade to electrical infrastruc­ture in the borough that will require the removal of 39 street trees.

PECO spokesman Greg Smore said the project will require the replacemen­t of 132 utility poles, as well as installing 14 new ones and the stringing of 18,000 feet of new electric wires.

“We’re installing new equipment and upgrading lower-voltage circuits to higher voltage,” Smore said.

New devices called “re-closers” will also be put up on the poles. “Think of it as a kind of circuit breaker,” Smore explained.

When a line is downed, either by weather or a vehicle collision, the device will shut down and isolate the issue, “and that will minimize the outage,” Smore said.

“This projectwas developed to support the retirement of an older substation and will modernize the local electric infrastruc­ture,” Smore wrote in an email to MediaNews Group.

The improvemen­ts are designed to enhance reliabilit­y, increase capacity tomeet increased electric usage, and support the future growth of solar-generated power, according to Smore.

“In terms of reliabilit­y, the project will also reduce both the frequency and duration of outages for customers in the area,” he

wrote.

Themajorit­y of this constructi­on work will take place along Adams, Bailey, Beech, Chestnut, Evans, Franklin, Grant, King, Sheridan, Walnut, Warren, and Washington Streets, as well as Buttonwood, Lesher, and Rowen Alleys, Lincoln Avenue, and Old State Road.

According to Smore, the trees being taken out are due to their location where new poles, or higher replacemen­t poles, are required for the upgrades.

Specific cross streets were not available.

The tree removals are expected to be completed by January and the power upgrade project to be completed by the fall of 2021, said Smore.

Tree removals will not occur on every street referenced above and “we worked with the borough to minimize the number of tree removals as much as possible,” Smore said.

PECO will not replace, or pay to replace, the street trees it removes, said Smore.

“The borough can apply for training, trees and grants through the Pennsylvan­ia Horticultu­ral Society and their Tree Tenders or Treevitali­ze watersheds programs to add more trees to the community,”

Smore wrote.

“There are a variety of trees and shrubs with heights of less than 25 feet which are compatible for planting under electric distributi­on lines,” Smore added.

Pot tstown Borough Manager JustinKell­er indicated that “PECO is working with us to find a TreeVitali­ze grant and they have reached out to local tree tender organizati­ons to help identify volunteers.”

Keller explained, “the way these grants work is TreeVitali­ze will provide the trees but the trees will have to be planted by volunteers per the terms of the grant and some of the volunteers have to be certified tree tenders.”

 ?? MEDIANEWS GROUP FILE PHOTO ?? Some of the street trees along Beech Street, which bloom like this in the spring, will be removed by PECO to make space for an upgrade to the electrical system.
MEDIANEWS GROUP FILE PHOTO Some of the street trees along Beech Street, which bloom like this in the spring, will be removed by PECO to make space for an upgrade to the electrical system.

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