Power company workers sequester in the office during COVID-19 crisis

BySTEPHANIE EBBS ABCNews logo
Friday, April 3, 2020

Think how much worse this coronavirus crisis would be if the power went out.

That's one of the reasons utility operators, the people who run your electricity service, are taking steps to sequester employees in offices, power stations, and control rooms to keep everything running.

Thirty-seven employees of the New York Independent System Operator, a private company that runs part of the electricity grid in New York, are living in RVs and trailers at two of the company's facilities.

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One of those employees, Tim Pasquini, said he volunteered because about two years ago he got 10 weeks of paid leave to be home with his newborn son, thanks to the paid family leave law in New York state.

"It's something everyone in the state of New York pays into. And I got that benefit because of everyone, I see it more as giving back to everyone else in this time where there's like a pandemic going on," he told ABC News.

Pasquini said the past week that he's lived at the facility felt kind of like camping and that he sees people on calls with their families every day, but that he could see it getting old if it goes on for too long.

"Last week we had a couple nice, sunny days -- we were all out in lawn chairs hanging out outside our trailers. Someone brought a guitar. We've been trying to stay busy, we have cornhole we've been playing in the parking lot. And we got a bunch of board games, things like that," he said.

The City of Tallahassee in Florida also has about 120 employees working in power plants and maintaining power and natural gas service to its more than 123,000 customers. They opted to have some of the workforce sequestered a week at a time so employees can trade off weeks home with their family, while also following strict social distancing protocols.

General Manager Rob McGarrah said the city is used to housing employees for a few days during hurricanes but had to figure out how to adapt that plan to provide everything they need for weeks, including coordinating meal deliveries from local restaurants, renting dozens of RVs, and converting offices into living spaces.

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