The City of Truth or Consequences posted on its website and Facebook page that one of its two aging electrical transformers has been repaired as of June 15.
The city had been operating on one transformer for an unstated period of time. As temperatures increased, burdening the sole operating transformer and increasing the likelihood it, too, would go down, the city made the public aware of the issue. Over the last two weeks the city used its website, Facebook page and utility bills to request the public use as little electricity as possible, especially between the hours of 12 p.m. and 8 p.m.
The June 15 announcement stated: “At this time all necessary repairs to the Substation Transformer have been completed and it is now up and running. You may now return to your normal electric usage.”
The repair, which entailed the purchase of a new tap charger and its installation and testing, cost $32,938.73, City Manager Bruce Swingle reported in a June 16 email response to the Sun’s request for information.
The city still needs to replace the transformer, which is about 60 years old, as is the second transformer. The expected life of a transformer is about 50 years, Electric Department Director Bo Easley told the city commission at a budget hearing in early May.
“We are conducting a procurement on a transformer currently,” Swingle stated in his email to the Sun. “The cost is projected to be between $1M and $1.5M for the transformer.”
In order to help pay for a new transformer, the city commission cut $1.8 million from the 2021-2022 budget during the May 5 budget hearing.
At that hearing, Easley said the city was waiting on a response to a grant application seeking funds to purchase the transformer. Stating his opinion that the purchase couldn’t wait, Swingle advised the city commissioners of the need to cut the budget in order to afford the purchase as soon as possible.
At its June 9 meeting, the commission approved a budget adjustment allowing the city to cash in the electric department’s investment fund, which totaled more than $550,000. It was not stated the cash will go to purchasing the transformer, but the timing of the adjustment is suggestive.
Living in Truth or Consequences, with even a minimum of attention paid to its government, is like watching a slow-motion train wreck. Why are our elected officials not more on top of things, like the fact that the basic equipment of our electrical network is ten years past its “best by date”?! As any attentive householder knows and, hopefully, prepares for, the furnace and air conditioner have limited lifespans—money is budgeted for those things.
One would think that the fact that our electrical grid might go down any time now, that a heavy rainfall will paralyze downtown businesses every time, that if you allow semis to drive on residential roads like Silver Street, they’re gonna break the plumbing under the road and you’ll be chasing leaks forever. This is ridiculous. Our town needs to be paid attention and attended to in advance of disasters!
When I was elected to the town council in Carrizozo, I spent a full day with every department head AND with the chief of police, plus we were required to attend a training by the Municipal League to get familiar with things like the open meetings act, budgets, Roberts rules, etc. Our commissioners seem to be clueless as to what their jobs are and what their employees are doing and are constantly blind-sided and surprised by predictable disasters. What is required of our folks? Anything besides showing up at a twice-a-month meeting?