Home » Consumer News »Video » Currently Reading:

Copper Thieves Cost Taxpayers Money When Emergency Services Are Impacted

Phillip Dampier November 16, 2010 Consumer News, Video No Comments

Copper thieves looking for quick cash, typically to finance drug habits, continue to plague telecommunications companies who find their networks literally stripped as brazen thieves rip utility lines right off phone poles.  Although these thefts eventually cost cable, phone, and electric utility customers money in the form of higher bills, taxpayers are increasingly paying the price for copper thefts affecting wireless communications networks.

That’s because emergency responders are increasingly placing communications equipment at existing commercial cell sites and radio communications centers, and when those networks go down communities pick up the tab and argue about the bill later.

[flv width=”640″ height=”380″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/WSOC Charlotte – Copper Thefts Costing Taxpayers 11-16-10.flv[/flv]

WSOC-TV in Charlotte visits Rock Hill to see how copper thefts are costing area taxpayers plenty.  (2 minutes)

Scrap copper wire - as good as gold

In Charlotte, N.C., copper thieves are targeting copper plates that can weigh up to 70 pounds used to ground cell and radio towers to protect them from lightning strikes.

Without them, towers and the equipment used to deliver service can be seriously damaged, leading to the loss of cell phone service and a county’s emergency radio system.  That can leave dispatchers unable to talk to police and firefighters.

Because of the importance of these communications systems, when plates go missing, York County taxpayers pick up the tab for replacing them.  That costs several thousand dollars every time the plates have to be replaced.

WSOC-TV in Charlotte noted while working on a story about the thefts, just one day after plates were replaced from one tower, they were stolen again.

New legislation designed to crack down on illicitly-obtained copper sold to recycling firms should have curtailed the ability for thieves to turn tons of copper into stacks of cash.  But despite new laws in states like California, legislation is only effective when it is enforced.  In northern California, budget cuts eliminated the one officer that devoted time and energy to stopping copper thefts in the Sacramento area.  A local television station went undercover and discovered the state might as well not even have a law, because they were able to obtain quick cash for copper… no questions, or ID, asked.

[flv]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/KOVR Sacamento Copper Wire Rules Not Followed 11-16-10.flv[/flv]

KOVR-TV in Sacramento went undercover and discovered the futility of copper theft legislation that is not enforced.  (5 minutes)

Search This Site:

Contributions:

Recent Comments:

Your Account:

Stop the Cap!