December 7

City lacks inspection records at site prior to dog’s electrocution on Thanksgiving

Uncategorized

0  comments

After Sammy, a German short-hair pointer, walked onto a electrified metal cover on Queen Anne Ave on Thanksgiving Day and died, many more stories of animals sustaining injuries from “stray voltage” on city streets have come out.

The accident was the result of a pinched wire and bad electrical work (including a lack of grounding), according to City Light, in an area of the electrical system that powers four streetlights in the 1500 block of Queen Anne Avenue N. In the two weeks since Sammy’s death, the city has been working to find out why this dangerous zone went unnoticed for so long.

“Our crews investigated the cause. We discovered that the original installation in 2006 did not include proper grounding of the four lights. Our crews have made the necessary repairs to all these lights and tested for any potential electrical charges. There is no electrical charge to any of the lights or groundcover plates. All the streetlights are functioning,” City Light Superintendent Jorge Carrasco said in a release last week.

While City Light officials said the accident was an “isolated incident,” the faulty work that caused it may have passed unnoticed due to a lack of inspection records, according to a report by the Seattle PI released Monday. From the PI:

A city invoice showed that an inspector had billed for the electrical project twice in 2005, when the system was installed, said Richard Sheridan, a spokesman for the Department of Transportation. But no record exists documenting what the inspector did or found during the visits.

“At the time (the project was installed), we did not require written field reports from electrical inspectors,” Sheridan said Monday.

After Sammy’s death, the city discovered the pinched wire and missing grounding. Sheridan says the department is still investigating how the lack of grounding was overlooked by the inspector back in 2005, a difficult task given that it’s been several years and the project inspector has since retired.

Since July the department’s inspectors, all “highly qualified” certified electricians, according to Sheridan, have been required to document inspections of private-public improvement projects in a field report. But in a few weeks City Light will take over the inspection process, a decision the department says was made in an effort to streamline the system. Read the full story at the Seattle PI.


Tags

City Light, electrocution, Richard Sheridan, Sammy, SDOT, Seattle PI


You may also like

Sephora coming to Ballard Blocks 2

Sephora coming to Ballard Blocks 2

Self-Defense

Self-Defense

Subscribe to our newsletter now!