What is the name of your state? Pennsylvania
Hello everyone! Hope your new year is off to a good start so far. Looking for some advice regarding settling a complaint I filed with the Public Utility Commission (PUC) against a utility for service quality/reliability issues. Some of you may remember my post back from October. We did end up mediating it amongst ourselves without the PUC approved mediator. The PUC basically said we are here for either party if you need us if communication breaks down or if you run into an issue you can't solve. Perhaps fortunately, I've had good communication with the utility's third-party attorney representing them.
Unbeknownst to their third-party counsel, the utility actually sent a worker to my house during an outage (electric) and I provided a very detailed description of the issue, including every street that I was aware of that had the same issue. This worker later returned & told me the identified a possible problem, but it will take some time to resolve. About a week later, my local town posted an update on social media claiming that the utility has temporarily stabilized the issue & are working on a long-term fix. I shared this with their third-party counsel, who said they would get a status update for me regarding the fix.
My question becomes: What happens now? If they report the issue as fixed, do I just withdraw my complaint? The expressed goal of mediation per the PUC is "a full resolution, including withdraw of Complaint." My main concern is making sure the issue is permanently fixed, so it does not re-occur. I have no issues on granting a reasonable amount of time necessary for the repair. I'd just like to see that this will be followed through on.
I suppose what I want is more of a settlement rather than a complete withdraw so that there would be an agreement in place where the utility agrees to complete the repair. Is this a more solid choice for me to request? What should I ask for? I'd obviously like to retain the right to re-file if the issue were to occur again, or to enforce the agreement.
Hello everyone! Hope your new year is off to a good start so far. Looking for some advice regarding settling a complaint I filed with the Public Utility Commission (PUC) against a utility for service quality/reliability issues. Some of you may remember my post back from October. We did end up mediating it amongst ourselves without the PUC approved mediator. The PUC basically said we are here for either party if you need us if communication breaks down or if you run into an issue you can't solve. Perhaps fortunately, I've had good communication with the utility's third-party attorney representing them.
Unbeknownst to their third-party counsel, the utility actually sent a worker to my house during an outage (electric) and I provided a very detailed description of the issue, including every street that I was aware of that had the same issue. This worker later returned & told me the identified a possible problem, but it will take some time to resolve. About a week later, my local town posted an update on social media claiming that the utility has temporarily stabilized the issue & are working on a long-term fix. I shared this with their third-party counsel, who said they would get a status update for me regarding the fix.
My question becomes: What happens now? If they report the issue as fixed, do I just withdraw my complaint? The expressed goal of mediation per the PUC is "a full resolution, including withdraw of Complaint." My main concern is making sure the issue is permanently fixed, so it does not re-occur. I have no issues on granting a reasonable amount of time necessary for the repair. I'd just like to see that this will be followed through on.
I suppose what I want is more of a settlement rather than a complete withdraw so that there would be an agreement in place where the utility agrees to complete the repair. Is this a more solid choice for me to request? What should I ask for? I'd obviously like to retain the right to re-file if the issue were to occur again, or to enforce the agreement.