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LETTER: BGE Plans to Trim Trees

In a letter to the editor, the utility company's chief customer officer says the majority of outages are caused by trees and their limbs coming into contact with power lines.

BGE is committed to continually investing in the measures that provide you safe and reliable electric service. We understand that power outages—especially extended outages, can severely disrupt our customers’ lives.  That’s why we strive to maintain reliable electric service through various methods, including the application of a robust tree and vegetation management program.

During severe thunderstorms, the vast majority of the outages are caused by tree limbs, or in many cases, entire trees, coming into contact with our power lines. Following such storms, BGE employees and contractors canvass our electric delivery system, evaluating and, when necessary, addressing trees that have been weakened by the storms.

To enhance reliability, BGE increased its spending on vegetation management and tree trimming during the past few years from $23.5 million in 2007 to nearly $35 million in 2012 and include efforts to trim and remove trees along our more than 10,500 miles of overhead power lines. Now, BGE is enhancing our Tree and Vegetation Management Program as we work to implement requirements mandated by the Maryland Public Service Commission (PSC).

For more than a year, BGE, Maryland’s other utilities and other key stakeholders worked with the PSC as it developed regulations as required by the 2011 Maryland Electricity Service Quality and Reliability Act. These regulations, called RM 43, went into effect on May 28, 2012 and include standards intended to enhance electric reliability through a number of methods, including the increased management of trees and vegetation near power lines.

While many of BGE’s tree and vegetation management practices will remain the same, BGE may need to prune or remove trees that we have previously allowed to coexist with distribution power lines. Additionally, BGE will conduct more comprehensive tree and vegetation management along overhead lines located close to the company’s electrical substations—critical facilities that manage the delivery of power from generating plants to customer homes and neighborhoods.

We know that these changes will be evident to our customers and are committed to partnering with them throughout this process to address concerns and answer questions. We look forward to providing customers with safer and even more reliable electric service, as we know that customers experience up to 40 percent fewer tree-related outages in areas that have been recently trimmed 90 to 95 percent of the time. In severe storm conditions, such as a hurricane, we know customers experience up to 20 percent fewer tree-related outages.

To learn more about our Tree and Vegetation Management Program, please visit BGE.com/TreeCare. While there, customers can learn more about our pruning standards and Right Tree, Right Place Program, as well as take advantage of our interactive map, which depicts our planned schedule for tree and vegetation management over the next several months.

Thank you again for your patience and cooperation.

Sincerely,

Jeannette M. Mills
Chief Customer Officer
Baltimore Gas and Electric Company

tom August 18, 2012 at 05:01 pm
Sadly, when they're done many once beautiful trees are turned into something resembling caricatures of trees. Their guidelines are not very flexible and many trees that are not a threat to the power lines get butchered in the process. After removing one of my trees and turning another into a strange monstrosity, their contractor told me that neither of the trees actually posed a threat, but they had to follow the guidelines.
Paige August 19, 2012 at 02:14 am
BG&E is not welcome to trim trees on my property. The last time they did a "tree trimming" I signed a paper authorizing total removal of only 6 six trees and BG&E cut down 14! They took out my fence and didn't put it back right, they took down my play set and also took out my gas pool heater incorrectly. I was left with a $700 gas bill!!
During the last storm, a tree that was "trimmed" eventually died and the trunk was left, it fell into the lines in my neighbors yard and conducted the electricity into the ground. The fire department came out three times that night because of the fires, then Washington Gas came because the electricity conducted into the ground blew a gas line shooting flames in the air. But it took BG&E almost 24 hrs to come out even though it was their responsibility from the start. BG&E should have raised the poles/lines like they planned instead of cutting corners by just "trimming trees". It would help if BG&E had better monitoring of the contractors actually cutting the trees. Also, it would help the homeowner if the teams cutting the trees had at least one person on property, the entire time, that speaks English. Obviously, I have nothing nice to say about this.
hawkeye August 19, 2012 at 03:49 am
Between AA County and BGE, someone should be responsible for taking down dead trees and branches on B&A Blvd. and Evergreen Rd. It's a power outage-waiting-to-happen with these dead trees along the roadway.
LevelheadedOne August 19, 2012 at 02:08 pm
If more landowners kept their trees in check we wouldn't have as many outages as we do. If you have power lines along your property, it would be in everyone's best interest to keep your trees off of the lines. I am always amazed at the tangle of vines and dead branches that loom overhead throughout Arnold but along the B+A specifically. Don't wait for BGE to trim your trees. Take care of it. This should be a no-brainer chore for the winter when the leaves are gone. If you wait for BGE, we'll all lose power because you didn't take care of your property AND all of our rates will rise more than you think. Besides, your property will be more valuable since it will LOOK more appealing. Win-win!
LevelheadedOne August 19, 2012 at 02:13 pm
That must have been a scary night. Sorry to hear that BGE didn't trim your tree correctly. I'm sure if you had hired someone they would have done a better job to your liking. Sounds like the tree that died and fell on your neighbor's lines may have been already dying or dead?
Sfm257 August 19, 2012 at 09:02 pm
I called BG and E last year about a neighbor's pine tree that was growing up and into the power lines. BG and E said it was not their responsbility. Guess what? Yes, the neighbor's tree caused the power to go out.
LevelheadedOne August 19, 2012 at 09:08 pm
Out of curiosity, did anyone tell the neighbor who's tree it was?
Dave August 19, 2012 at 10:11 pm
I think that BG&E needs to be empowered by the state to aggressively trim around its power lines.
I have nothing against trees - keep them away from power lines or trim them back several feet. That's what happens in the midwest, where power outages are much less frequent.
Sandy DeAngelis August 20, 2012 at 01:57 pm
The tree the county planted by the sidewalk needs major trimming. How or who do I conact to make sure I am on the list?
MAW August 21, 2012 at 09:59 am
And you ma'am, are the reason we have power outages!!!!

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