
 
        
         
		LESSONS LEARNED WHILE ON THE BEAT 
 WITH BROOKLYN BOROUGH PRESIDENT ERIC ADAMS 
 Mother Nature has run out of patience: It’s  
 time to act on Outer Borough storm resiliency 
 OP-ED 
 COURIER L M BR B G IFE, SEPT. 4–10, 2020 17  
 BY ERIC ADAMS &  
 JUSTIN BRANNAN 
 Mother  Nature  does  not  
 care about the ongoing pandemic, 
  or the economic devastation  
 it has wreaked on our City  
 budget. In case any New Yorker  
 doubted that, Tropical Storm  
 Isaias set them straight. The intense  
 winds forced bridges and  
 railways to shut down, while  
 knocking down thousands of  
 trees that crashed into cars,  
 homes, and power lines. According  
 to Con Edison, Isaias  
 created the second-worst storm  
 outage  in  its  history,  trailing  
 only Superstorm Sandy in its  
 impact. For those of us in the  
 outer boroughs, it was déjà vu  
 all over again.  
 While  more  than  130,000  
 Con Edison customers lost  
 power due to Isaias, less than  
 100 of those customers were in  
 Manhattan. It took more than a  
 week for the lights to go back on  
 for all those affected, a damning  
 statement on the responsiveness  
 of our government and  
 utilities as well as our overall  
 resiliency. Extended power outages  
 are a threat to public health  
 and safety, especially amid the  
 sweltering heat of summer that  
 imperils our seniors and other  
 vulnerable neighbors. In the  
 wake of Isaias, and in the midst  
 of a hurricane season that will  
 probably not peak for weeks,  
 we should be focused on actions  
 big and small that will keep the  
 lights on when  the next  storm  
 hits.  
 After Sandy, our city restarted  
 a conversation about  
 burying power lines as a resiliency  
 investment to safeguard  
 against the impact of intense  
 storms. It is a conversation that  
 dates back to the Great Blizzard  
 of 1888, when the impact  
 of downed, sparking wires and  
 days of citywide darkness compelled  
 then-Mayor Grant’s order  
 to bury all overhead wires  
 at the time. Local Law 13 of 2013  
 directed  the  City  to  formally  
 study the expanded utilization  
 of underground power lines,  
 which called the conversion  
 “cost prohibitive.” The same  
 study called Sandy an “anomaly,” 
  which increasingly feels  
 like wishful thinking; 2020  
 is the record-breaking sixth  
 straight season with two pre- 
 June storms, and it’s the fi rst  
 on  record  to  have  nine  tropical  
 storms form before August.  
 The acceleration of climate  
 change corresponds with an acceleration  
 of the cost for the status  
 quo.   
 While Public Service Commission  
 Chair John Rhodes  
 has promised a new review of  
 this issue on the state level, the  
 two of us are partnering on new  
 City legislation requiring an  
 up-to-date  cost  assessment  on  
 burying the remaining overhead  
 power lines throughout  
 the outer boroughs, taking into  
 account the rising costs associated  
 with keeping them above  
 ground. If the cost estimate  
 seems feasible given current fi scal  
 realities, we should explore  
 a public works initiative with a  
 mix of public and private funding  
 streams to bury these lines,  
 which would put thousands of  
 New Yorkers back to work.  
 We  do  not  have  to wait  for  
 that study to begin chipping  
 away at this problem. Storm resiliency  
 is as basic an exercise  
 as managing our street trees.  
 We  urge  City  Hall  to  loosen  
 stringent regulations around  
 tree pruning by private contractors, 
  allow more leeway for homeowners  
 to hire private contractors  
 rather than relying on  
 the Parks Department for preventative  
 pruning, and restore  
 cuts to the City’s pruning budget, 
  which would be less costly  
 than retroactively addressing  
 downed trees. In addition, this  
 issue is one of many examples  
 where we see the shortcomings  
 of our 311 system, as complaints  
 are mysteriously closed  
 out  or  deprioritized.  Make  no  
 mistake, we can directly connect  
 ignored requests for tree  
 maintenance with the massive  
 power outages suffered from  
 Bay Ridge to Bayside.  
 The reality of climate  
 change  is  that  these  storms  
 will be more violent and more  
 frequent in the years ahead.  
 Every reform we defer or investment  
 we delay  is  likely  to  
 be  more  costly  as  time  goes  
 on, not just in the price tag  
 of implementation but in the  
 loss of jobs, homes, and lives  
 due to inaction. The beginning  
 of August showed us that  
 with Isaias, as did the end of  
 the month with Hurricane  
 Laura, which made the tenthstrongest  
 American hurricane  
 landfall on record. We cannot  
 afford to wait for a more convenient  
 time for change, because  
 Mother Nature has run out of  
 patience.  
 Eric  Adams  is  Brooklyn  
 Borough President.  
 Justin Brannan is a New  
 York  City  Councilman  who  
 represents the neighborhoods  
 of Bay Ridge, Dyker Heights,  
 Bensonhurst and Bath Beach. 
 Borough President Eric Adams. 
 Are we getting conned by ConEd? 
 BY JUSTIN BRANNAN 
 The end of summer means  
 after months of cranking the  
 AC, it’s almost time for those  
 dreaded summer utility bills.  
 I don’t know about you, but for  
 the past several years, when I  
 get these crazy bills, I’ve often  
 asked myself: where does all  
 this money go? What exactly am  
 I paying for? And why is such a  
 basic need so expensive? 
 The answer is: when we pay  
 our utility bills, we’re actually  
 writing checks to for-profi t entities  
 to deliver us energy that we  
 already own. Sound fair? Yeah,  
 I didn’t think so. 
 Energy makes its way into  
 your home because a private  
 company – in New York City’s  
 case, ConEd – buys energy from  
 the public grid, in order to sell it  
 – or deliver it – to you. They are  
 effectively a middleman, which  
 delivers your taxpayer-funded  
 energy to you, but not before  
 charging you a markup on that  
 energy. Why charge a markup?  
 Because ConEd, like Amazon  
 or Apple, is a private company  
 with shareholders looking to  
 make a profi t.   
 Regardless  of  what  party  
 you belong to or what your politics  
 are, I think we can all agree  
 that in 2020 and beyond, electricity  
 is a necessity, not a luxury. 
  Can you live without electricity? 
  Well, then that makes  
 energy a human right, not a  
 commodity to be sold for profi t.  
 A shareholder’s desire to make  
 money should not come before  
 your needs as a user of that electricity. 
  But our current model  
 creates a problem of accountability: 
  is ConEd’s fi rst priority  
 the delivery of fast, effi cient, reliable  
 electricity to our homes  
 or is to make as much money as  
 possible for their shareholders?  
 Hmmm. 
 Let’s be real: when the primary  
 goal  is to generate profi t  
 for your shareholders, and pay  
 millions of dollars in salary to  
 your highest executives while  
 you do it, there will never be  
 enough  money  to  make  the  
 hard fi xes necessary to adapt  
 for the changing climate. These  
 days, rate hikes have become as  
 reliable as power outages. For  
 decades, we’ve seen our bills go  
 up and up while our service has  
 become less and less reliable.  
 It’s no wonder ConEd shareholders  
 have  seen  nearly  50  
 years of dividend increases! 
 But there is a solution to this  
 problem: bring our utilities under  
 full public control. By doing  
 this, we can save New Yorkers  
 money, end mass outages, and  
 invest in renewable energy that  
 will help us adapt to a quickly  
 changing climate. Publicly  
 owned utilities are also democratically  
 controlled, and can be  
 held accountable when things  
 go wrong. Which means we no  
 longer will have to beg the executives  
 of for-profi t utility companies  
 to do the right thing. I’ve  
 tried. It doesn’t work.  
 I’m calling on my colleagues  
 in the New York State legislature  
 to  pass Assemblyman Robert  
 Carroll’s bills, which taken  
 together will bring our energy  
 grid  under  full  public  ownership  
 and control. We can’t afford  
 to  get  conned  by  ConEd.  
 There’s no time to waste. 
 Justin Brannan is a New  
 York City Councilman who represents  
 the neighborhoods of  
 Bay Ridge, Dyker Heights, Bensonhurst  
 and Bath Beach.