Dove Season 2021
7:41AM September 21, 2021
SIKESTON, Mo. (KFVS) - A Heartland electric company is
seeing outages due people shooting birds.
SEMO Electric Cooperative are experiencing these broadband
outages because of doves being shot at while on utility lines in southeast
Missouri.
Ten occurrences have happened since the start of September
for this particular company.
Fiber optic cables have been riddled by bullets, causing
damages and outages.
We talked with SEMO Electric Cooperative Fiber Services
Manager Loyd Rice who says each incident costs around $10,000 to repair and
will interrupt services.
“The data that does flow, that could be e-911 telephone
services, that could be a work from home. This year especially, a student that
needs to be home doing homework. Those outages again range from about four to
our longest one, about 10 hours,” said Loyd.
He said these repairs can be costly on crews and customers.
“It’s actual welding of glass to splice these back together,
very time consuming, very costly equipment,” Rice said. “So the nature of your
outage for what seems like a real innocent, ‘hey I’m going to shoot the bird
off the line’, becomes very costly to the member cooperative.”
Rice hopes people spread the word about this issue before it
causes more interruptions.
“We really have to start getting the message out because as
our service territory continues to grow, what has become a few thousand is
going to be an even bigger impact this time next year,” said Loyd.
The Missouri Department of Conservation says dove season
runs until November 29th this year.
https://www.kfvs12.com/2021/09/20/utility-lines-damaged-because-shots-fired-southeast-missouri/