A DAY IN THE LIFE
Yesterday it was damn hot and humid. And about 7 times the electricity went out, only to come back on in about 20 or 30 minutes. I have an inverter and 2 batteries so other then at times resetting either my cable box or my internet router, its not a big deal.
At 11:20 pm, the electricity went OUT. Last night i was using my air conditioner in combination with my ceiling fan so I noticed immediately. First the A/C goes off and the fan makes a slightly whiney sound. I drifted back so sleep as the room was pretty cool. At 2:30 am, now I am awake listening to the noise from my neighbors. There are about 28 people living there including small children (Slight exaggeration of course) and they have no inverter system so they are dying of heat and the kids are crying.
I called the electrical company at 2:30 and am told Story A.
I manage to go back to sleep, waking at 6 am, and I call again and I am told Story B.
Yup I am up for the day. Now its 8:30 am and I call again and I am told Story C.
My inverter has been working now since 11:20 pm but I only use a fan, internet and my computer, gotta work you know. Everything else is unplugged.
Now its 10:30 am, 11 hours of outage and I call again to get --------------wowwwwwww ------------ told .........there is NO REPORT of an outage. Really, are you kidding me???? Cause you know I wrote down every report I made from my phone.
I had a meeting at 11:30 am so off I go. I get back home at 2pm to find one of those big electricity trucks parked beneath a pole near our cul de sac. Yup there is something broken. Imagine that!!! Guy tells us all the part is bad but they don't have another one. He thinks he is going to leave..........oh hell no. All the men in the area surround the truck and he calls into the company for help. Imagine that they find a part and we get our repair done!
At 4 pm this afternoon our electricity came back on!!!!! Almost 18 hours of outage! Yikes.
You might think this is a bit of a crazy story, but, trust me it really isn't. This is the kind of thing that can and will go on here. Adapting is critical. Knowing when to get tougher with organizations here is important, knowing your neighbors, being friendly etc all helps to handle these things. Being able to laugh at times will keep your sanity.
And having the number of a local colmado to order a cold beer, or some rum and coke - is priceless!!!!
The part about "yep it is broken, and we don't have the part" is not surprising at all. It is kind of a standard MO here.
Bob K
There is a universal tactic among people who take complaints and do not know diddly about the problem to lie and make up stuff. This certainly exists in the US. My college's bookstore did not have textbooks. The faculty complained, and were told that the bookstore did not receive the order forms. When copies of the order forms submitted were shown, they said that the problem was not that the PROPER order forms were submitted, and passed out copies of a new order form no one has seen before. Both forms, when completed, gave the author, publisher, publisher's address and telephone. The new forms were submitted. No books arrived, not one.
Finally, I called the publisher, who told me that no books were sent because the college (who had sold the books and taken the students' money) had not paid for books for the previous two semesters. Other professors then called publishers and got the same answer. The Business Manager actually DENIED that a dozen publishers had not been paid. A month later, the bills were paid, and the faculty was not informed. My solution was to buy cheap Spanish books downtown and sell them to the students.
So this sort of crap happens in the US as well. But perhaps in the DR they keep their representatives in the dark more often. When they say they do not have a part, that sounds rather like, "but perhaps we know where to BUY the part, if only, hint, hint".
In the US the power and water companies have a lot of oversight. I am sure that the reason for this is that many years ago, there were problems such as you describe. Cable companies are pretty bad at service everywhere, perhaps because they still can get away with it. Comcast and Time Warner are the most hated companies in the US.
Yup things are a mess i electricity world..........
Bob K
Bob K
Part of the problem is that there is not enough generating capacity in the DR, and that is partly because resources to generate electricity do not exist (though there could be a lot more hydroelectric power). Another problem is that that people do not pay for electricity. In many places, the only way to get electricity is to connect to the lines illegally. There is no way to connect legally. .
There was no public electricity in Las Terrenas until 1990. If you had lights, it was because you had a planta (generator). Since then the place has been wired, and I think they have meters and people pay their bills any everything. . .
That is the biggest reason there is not enough electrical production - still we have close to 40%electrical theft across this country!!!
The 60%who pay cannot pay for 100% consumption. Simple math!!!
When I arrived in Barahona in July, a guy flagged down the guagua and told him that the main highway into town was blocked, because there was a huelga. Huelga, of course, does not mean anyone has stopped working in order to get more pay from the boss. It means that some clowns blocked the road to protest electricity outages, which are daily in most of Barahona. So the driver turned down a dusty path and let me out at the Shell station, and I got a motoconcho back up the hill to Palmerito. Huelgas do not normally bother motoconchos, which just zip around the blocks and limbs they have put in the street,
The huelga had no affect other than to annoy people wishing to use the paved road into town. There was a rumor that there would be a huelga on July 26th (the Cuban Revolution is celebrated on this date in 1953, when Fidel attacked the Moncada barracks and lost most of his followers), which was a Saturday.
The colmados (all five of them) all turned off their music and shut down. The lights went out. There was very little traffic on the street, which is usually busy. Then... nothing happened. There was no mention of any possible huelga that I heard, but somehow, there was a rumor that there might be a huelga and then a rumor that nothing would happen. Un misterio.
Most of the houses in Palmerito do not have electric meters. Those that once had one have painted them over. Wires have been routed around them. The connections that run to the houses do not look like amateur wiring jobs such as I have seen in Mexico and Ecuador. (Tie a rock to a bare wire and fling it over the line). Lots of messy clots of wires on the poles.
I was told that several years ago they were all disconnected in protest. It was announced on the local radio station that soon the blackouts would end when people started paying their bills. There was some sort of plan to reconnect//install new meters. But nothing has happened. The electricity usually comes on at 7 AM,and goes out around 10. It returns around noon and goes off around 3:00 PM. In the evenings, it is sporadic, and can come on anything between 5PM and midnight. It can pop on and off for or five times every night. When it comes on everyone cheers. When it goes out, everyone groans.
People in Palmerito don't get a lot of mail, and the houses are not numbered. The usual way someone finds their true address is to check the light bill. But no one has received one of those since 2010. The usual way one gives an address is to indicate a nearby business (Colmado Mirian, Carneceria Fulano) after the street name. Then one asks around.
I suppose that I could go to the electric company and offer to pay a bill, but I look far too much like a gringo. And it would not result in better service. So I shall just do nothing and try to blend in.
Electrical distributors have connected many many areas, spent thousands hooking up, only to have it all disconnected by the tigueres and reconnected illegally! At some point they stopped trying in many areas.
There is a long long history of entitlement in some barrios. It is not going to go away easily or quickly. It is a HUGE problem to all of us.
And then there are those who know how to take advantage of the system, install several meters when they are entitled to one, install one but bypass almost all their usage to illegal feeds. Or those who are powerful and just steal and know they will get away with it. That is another whole group.
Mail - yes I laugh about this often. Every month I have to call to get my current balance owing on my electricity. i have to call to get my water bill. etc etc etc. If you don't pay they cut you off. But they do not feel bound to actually tell you how much to pay.
The first day I had a bank statement arrive at my house I almost feel over in shock. Mail just simply does not exist. Companies have messengers who go out (sometimes) and deliver the notices etc. Many times I am sure they all get tossed in garbage cans..... etc.
Huelgas - yup the local and disorganized are a pain in the butt.
The organised are a huge pain. I have had to change travel plans and work plans due to major huelgas. Almost always we get notified in advance but every once in a while there is a big one and it wreaks havoc. Advice to anyone and everyone - see a huelga - go the other way immediately!! Do not get caught up in any of it. It is dangerous as often we do not know why they are upset and who they are upset at! Don't make it you.
Here in Miami, a neighbor's son proposed that I pay a buddy $200 to furgle my electric meter to lower my bill. I declined, first because I am not a thief, but also because no one my neighbor's son has ever been competent. Once he asked to mow my lawn...for $50. It takes me about an hour when I do it myself. I said Fifty AMERICAN dollars? and said, no, thanks. My neighbor is a cheerful Puerto Rican guy who keeps me up on the neighborhood gossip. He likes to mention that no one messes with him because he sleeps with a loaded pistol under his pillow. One of his sons shot some guy (not fatally) and spent several years in prison. A second son had a fight with his wife, who ratted out to the police that he had some sort of very illegal gun. The police found the gun and sent him off to prison. Eventually, Pedro will figure out that guns have caused him far more trouble than they have prevented, but I will let him figure that out for himself.
40% of electricity is stolen, and not matter what small efforts are made this does not change and this includes not only the poor but major companies, and rich individuals as well. Like Planner said ... entitlement
Huelgas are a ineffective but the folks like them because it get them a day off work (usually with pay) they get to start fires and throw rocks with out fear of punishment. Notice how many are scheduled for Friday afternoons to give a long weekend...and nothing changes
Mail....one of the biggest jokes around. But lots of people work for the "postal service" and collect some decent wages for NO WORK.
But you learn to live with this stuff and we continue to live in paradise.
Bob K
We had rain first thing this morning then some sun and from about noon on clouds and now thunderstorms and some heavy rain. All makes for a brutal Friday afternoon traffic mess in Santo Domingo. Friday afternoon and evening is consistently the worst time of week to do anything!!!!! Thank goodness I mostly work from home and so I stay home on Fridays whenever it is an option!
In addition to regular traffic jam times, it will build even more starting about 4pm and continue well past 8pm. And good lord help us if it rains like today!!!! I was once in the business district at 6 pm on a rainy Friday and I waited 1 hour 45 minutes for a taxi. Yup brutal.
Great day to be at home. I hope everyone enjoys their weekend!!!!
We too have had a good run with electricity and only lost it 4 times in 25 min last night during some heavy rain. It is good when we lose it for an hour so as we can run the AC to keep it "greased" at no additional costs (on the Generator then).
Great dinner last night for our anniversary. It was probably the best dinner we have had here in the DR. Restaurant is called Bliss in Cabarete and would recommend it to anyone. Not bad price either, a bit expensive but well worth it.
Bob K
Its my anniversary Sunday - 11 years here in paradise. I am celebrating with a full body massage, facial and then dinner with friends!
Bob K
Rain world too.Planner my trips approaching fast! And Ill also be doing some school shopping for my little ones pretty soon, some probably this weekend. Why dont you send me a pm with your thoughts on some of the supplies you could use. Ill try to knock that out rt away.
Bob K
Huelga this week at UASD the public university. Outside groups continuously use students and the campus to stage huelgas. Lots of rock, bottle throwing, tire burning, traffic becomes horrible and police are called in. It is ugly and dangerous. To some its a cause for others a day off school and some excitement. It also can turn tragic.
Stay well clear!!!


Bob K
Bob K
Such is life on a tropical island!!!! Soooooo much fun! IF the sun comes back out, laundry goes back out.
Ohhh and by cooler, I mean 86 F instead of 94F......LOL
Still overcast here
Bob K
Last night it felt like December! hahahahahaha
Bob K
Planner congrats on the anniversary. Eleven years...WOW!
Bob K

I will post it tomorrow.Today I travelled to Puerto Plata to meet friends. Damn we laughed so hard, I might have hurt something.......
Friday at 12:30 i will be in Costambar at El Carey restaurant to meet a few people. Anyone wants to join us is welcome. El Carey is right on the ocean close to the west end of the beach.
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