EDITORIAL
Con Ed must answer for electrical death
The tragic death of Jodie Lane, a 30-year-old E. 12th St. resident, after she came in contact with an electrified junction box cover in the East Village last Friday night was a truly horrendous event. A Columbia Ph.D. candidate in clinical psychology, Lane had her life and a promising career ahead of her when her dogs got electrocuted on the metal cover, she tried to help them and ended up dead.
In addition to the grief of Lanes friends, family and acquaintances, many questions remain unanswered. First of all, in this city where residents already have so much to be anxious about, now comes the fear that anyone can be killed simply by doing something as innocuous as walking their dogs in the street. Con Edison must answer for how these junction boxes, of which there are 250,000 scattered on almost every street in New York City and Westchester, can become lethal.
In Tribeca, theres one on Greenwich St. between Chambers and Duane Sts., just opposite Washington Market Park, where many small children walk. Would that there were only one in Lower Manhattan. There are lots.
Some Downtown dog walkers have long known there are hotspots on local streets, places where electricity surges through the sidewalk, causing their dogs to jump and yelp in pain. Following Fridays tragedy, Con Ed suddenly got on the ball and responded to various exposed cables and hotspots that have long been cause for concern. A cable on the sidewalk outside St. Dymphnas restaurant and bar on St. Marks Pl. was promptly dealt with by Con Ed workers who responded in a battalion of trucks. Con Ed workers were on it to use their advertising slogan on a hot spot on a sidewalk on Ridge St. that school children there reportedly have known existed since May.
The problem is no secret: in the winter, salt, snow and water seep into these junction boxes as well as manhole covers; wires get eroded and the metal covers or sidewalks get electrified.
Con Ed says it simply cant make these boxes and manholes airtight. Well, thats simply not a good enough answer. Either they must be made airtight, so nothing seeps into them or salt must stopped being used on sidewalks and streets to melt snow (but that seems unlikely) or the lids of these utilities must be made with nonconductive materials. At the very least, Con Ed must immediately put in place a stepped up inspection system for these boxes. And Con Ed must respond immediately to reports of hotspots where whole sections of sidewalks are electrified.
Also of concern was the police response to Lanes plight. One female police officer was shocked after trying to help Lane and taken to Bellevue Hospital for observation. Yet, according to eyewitnesses, Lane was left lying in the gutter on the electrified cover for about 20 minutes, while other police stood by, and prevented anyone from trying to assist her.
An investigation of the police response should be conducted.
Clearly, until Con Ed solves this problem, police need better training on how to assist injured civilians on electric plates on the street. If police were better-prepared, it is possible that a promising young life could have been saved.