Community Corner
Tiny Fraction of SDG&E Customers Opt to Remove Wireless Smart Meters
In Carlsbad, 27 customers have restored analog meters.
Two months after state regulators allowed electric and gas customers to opt out of wireless smart meters, only 720 SDG&E customers have done soβout of nearly 1.4 million, the utility says.
In Northern California, nearly 40 times as many have removed or blocked installation of smart meters.
Late Tuesday afternoon, spokesman Paul Moreno of San Francisco-based Pacific Gas & Electric Co. said:Β βAbout 28,000 PG&E customers have elected to opt out of PG&Eβs SmartMeter program.β Β
Find out what's happening in Carlsbadfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
He said the company has about 5.6 million customers in itsΒ service area of Northern and Central California.
In Carlsbad, 27 customers have asked for their gas or electric smart meters to be removed, according to SDG&E spokeswoman Erin Coller.
Find out what's happening in Carlsbadfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Such wireless meters, which communicate with the utility via radiofrequency means, have been called health hazardsβa claim SDG&E disputes. When smart meters come off, old-style analog meters (with the round spinning plate) go back on.Β
As of June 12, Coller said, 508 electric smart meters have been replaced with analog models, and 374 gas smart meters have been replaced.
The number of opt-outs in other Patch communities:
- Coronado: 5
- Santee: 4
- La Mesa: 25
- Encinitas: 33
- Imperial Beach: 1
- Lemon Grove: 1
- Ramona: 15
- Poway: 7
- Oceanside: 36
- La Jolla: 42
- Rancho Bernardo (92128): 7
Susan Brinchman, director and founder of La Mesa-based Center for Electrosmog Prevention, on Monday attributed the low numbers to SDG&E played βhard to getβ on opt-outs in April and early May.
She said that the utility made people wait 30 minutes and more to speak to someone when they called the opt-out hotline and that βpeople were given the wrong info in some cases.β
SDG&E also stressed the cost of opting outβa one-time fee of $75 and a $10 monthly chargeβto discourage customers from restoring their analog meters, Brinchman said via email.
βThe opt-out is a secretβonly telling the people who complained earlier β¦Β about the opt-out,β she said. βNo one would think to look it up on their website unless they already knew.β
Brinchman said SDG&E failed to insert opt-out information in customer bills, but spokeswoman Coller said Tuesday that βI thought you might want to take a look at this online version of the June bill insert that is going out to all customers this month (see the top right corner).βΒ See PDF attached to this story.
SDG&E has an FAQ about smart meter opt-outs on its website.
Brinchman also blamed poor media coverage for the few opt-outs and said: βPeople do not want to pay the fees or can't afford them. See the towns that had fewer opt-outs.β
For her groupβs part, βWe are working on the elimination of the fees, community opt-outs, the big picture, getting fliers out. But since people hate the fees, they arenβt opting out anyhow. They donβt understand the risk or canβt afford it.β
Brinchman said her group saw the low rates of opt-outs coming.
βWe are working on phase II and the big picture, nationally,β she said. βExpecting a corrupted [California Public Utilities Commission] to fix things is like beating a dead horse. The population in [Southern California] is largely a product of very laid back, industry-tuned media.β
She vowed to eliminate fees, wireless smart meters and the wireless infrastructure.
βThis isnβt over and we will win,β said Brinchman, who described her own smart meter health effects in a series of . βWhy? Because it is in alignment with what is supposed to happen, according to existing laws, and weβre right. The truth will ultimately prevail.β
Brinchman said about 20 groups are fighting smart meters in California and cited these sites:
- CEP Filings at CPUC 2011-2012Β (about 30 filings) Β
- Smart Meter Activism Sites: CA and USA Β
- Where Smart Meters Are OptionalΒ Β
- CA & Federal Laws That Support No Opt-Out Fees
In an email sent supporters a week ago, Brinchman said she pays her opt-out fees in a separate check, notated βpaid under duress.β
She also said she has noticed improvements in her healthββbeing able to sleep better, less ringing in the ears, and reduction in headaches. I am able to be near the new analog meters outside without feeling ill.β
A found almost half of respondents considering restoring their old analog meters.
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