This article was posted 01/26/2009 and is most likely outdated.

Energy Plan Jolts Emporia Families
 

 

Subject - Energy Plan Jolts Emporia Families

January 26, 2009
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Energy plan jolts Emporia families

Westar wants to expand a substation in Emporia to accommodate Hill's, but neighbors are alarmed

ImageEMPORIA — Joanne Evans is leery of washing dishes in the kitchen of her eastside home.

There is reason to cast a wary eye out the window while standing at the sink overlooking a Westar Energy substation. The kitchen appears to be a magnet for stray voltage suspected of escaping from the towering web of steel framing, wire and transformers that casts a shadow over Evans' neighborhood.

Members of her family say they have endured shocks since the home was bought in 2004 — a purchasing decision made by the Evanses after the Topeka utility gave a clean bill of health to a substation that went into operation during the Great Depression.

 

Click here to read the full article by Tim Carpenter, The Capital-Journal.

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Comments
  • This is not an extended emf field problem unless it is very close. I agree with Jeff this is probably a grounding problem or a leakage into the ground. Someone needs to go in and do a complete analysis.

    I first would check all the grounds then I would take a voltage reading and depending on how much and the pattern go from there.

    Jim Yancey-NC-DOI

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