Thursday 7 July 2016

The humour of NB Power (August 3)


DIARY

Where do I apply to join ‘other customers’?

                        by Robert LaFrance

            On the evening of Saturday, July 23, the power went off at our estate here in Kincardine. It happens, to us and to everyone else, so it wasn’t a big deal. After three or four hours it returned with a flourish.
            What was exceptionally annoying was that I was waiting on the phone for well over an hour and an half, just to report the power outage. Surely there is some mechanism for NB Power to have an automatic response when one phones to report a power ‘interruption’.
            Remember, this is the year 2016, when there are driverless cars that can go from Halifax to Vancouver.
            How hard would it be to have a computer setup that, once the customer punches in the location of the outage, can answer right then: “Okay big guy. We got it. We now know that you have a power interruption at your place. Light your kerosene lamp and read a book. Drink some lemonade.”
            Apparently this is rocket science. Instead, after I had I dialled NB Power and punched in the location of the outage on my smartphone, I waited and waited and waited. And waited – for 93 minutes.
            Even that wouldn’t be totally annoying, but every minute or two a Voice came on to remind me that “due to unexpected high call volumes” all their people were busy with “other customers”. My question was (if I could have found a human to talk to): who are these “other people” and how do I join that happy throng?
            Let’s go back to the phrase “unexpectedly high call volumes”. Because I planned to attend the Highland Games on July 23 in Fredericton, from Wednesday on I had been looking at weather forecasts. Each day I was seeing ‘possible thunder showers’. On Friday morning the weather people (my old crowd) were saying ‘probable widespread thunder showers and possible power outages’.
            So, NB Power, why was the power outage call volume “unexpectedly high”?
            Anyway, long story short(er), all is well and the power is back on. By the way, it was caused by an unexpected lightning strike. They usually don’t announce it before they hit trees and cats. And the bottom line is: Many complaints like mine could be avoided if we could just call in, report the outage to a computer somewhere, and go back to the lemonade and special brownies.
            By the way, the Southern Victoria Pipe Band played well in the Highland Games and I was back home Saturday evening, just in time for that lightning storm. Timing is everything.
                                    *************************
            Other major news in our province:
            The Saint John Transit Commission, according to CBC Radio, has made some scheduling and other changes to “enhance revenue”, according to a company spokesman. Isn’t it interesting how times have changed in the accounting game? In the old days those changes would have been implemented “to make more money”.
            Some things are stranger than fiction. Last week the news story went around the world that the city of Mosul, Iraq, had set a new temperature record. According to the CBC Radio news report, people in that place – as if they didn’t have enough stress – were suffering under an air temperature of 55ºC. People were heading for Baghdad for some relief. It was only 54ºC there. A temperature of 55ºC is the equivalent of 131ºF. Can you picture Achmed and Gimsel meeting on the street? “Quite a scorcher today, huh?” says Achmed. Gimsel doesn’t answer. He’s a little spot of grease on the sidewalk.
            I’m going to have to drive to Moncton this afternoon and visit Flug who is ‘incarcerated’ there. That’s almost like being in jail. On July 7th he was all set to leave for the Cayman Islands to visit his money and was going through a baggage check at the airport. The highly educated and intelligent security guy was asking what was in a small bag in Flug’s suitcase and he answered “toothbrush, toothpaste, stuff like that, and lip balm.” The security guy heard “lip bomb”. You’d think Flug would be more careful in airports; three years ago he shouted across the airport lounge at his friend John Lallaree: “Hi, Jack!” That joke’s been going around for years; you would think Flug had heard it, but he only had eyes for Yew, his girlfriend at the time.
            There must have been a major TV documentary about bacteria on food, because every house I’ve been in lately has smelled of Lysol and other toxic chemicals which seem to be the rage nowadays. We’re supposed to wash our hands 87 times a day, preferably with carbolic acid, in order to stave off all the dread diseases we come into contact with every day. My friend the Perfessor said the other day: “No wonder people get sick; they don’t come into contact with a germ until they’re in their forties!”
                                                   -end-

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