What is the name of your state? Pennsylvania
Hello! I'm experiencing an issue with my utility where it keeps momentarily shutting off. This has been going on since earlier this year and is happening to all customers on this particular circuit from the utility substation. I have filed a formal complaint with the PUC. The utility responded and asked that the issue go before their mediation unit. I'm looking for advice on if this is appropriate or not since it requires consent from all parties.
It's advertised as quicker/easier/cheaper than a formal hearing...but it does say that it's not appropriate for when the result requires a "determination of an issue at law", "a party wants a determination of who is right", or for an issue where either party would like the result to serve as a precedent or establish a policy.
Fundamentally, I'm not sure if I fit into that not appropriate case since, to me, my issue seems to be a question of what is "reliable" since that term has no threshold value in the Pa. Code, nor the utility company's tariff.
The ultimate goal is to just get the utility to fix the issue. In their answer to my complaint they did admit to investigating every interruption, but have no underlying cause.
I'd love to see some opinions from this community on if you think this is something that can be mediated, or if I should just stick with the hearing. It does say that mediation is non-binding and that the mediator does not make a decision, instead the mediator is there to "assist the parties in reaching their own mutually acceptable agreement"...so I suppose that if we never reach an agreement to settle the dispute, we'd go to a formal hearing anyway? Is my understating correct?
Hello! I'm experiencing an issue with my utility where it keeps momentarily shutting off. This has been going on since earlier this year and is happening to all customers on this particular circuit from the utility substation. I have filed a formal complaint with the PUC. The utility responded and asked that the issue go before their mediation unit. I'm looking for advice on if this is appropriate or not since it requires consent from all parties.
It's advertised as quicker/easier/cheaper than a formal hearing...but it does say that it's not appropriate for when the result requires a "determination of an issue at law", "a party wants a determination of who is right", or for an issue where either party would like the result to serve as a precedent or establish a policy.
Fundamentally, I'm not sure if I fit into that not appropriate case since, to me, my issue seems to be a question of what is "reliable" since that term has no threshold value in the Pa. Code, nor the utility company's tariff.
The ultimate goal is to just get the utility to fix the issue. In their answer to my complaint they did admit to investigating every interruption, but have no underlying cause.
I'd love to see some opinions from this community on if you think this is something that can be mediated, or if I should just stick with the hearing. It does say that mediation is non-binding and that the mediator does not make a decision, instead the mediator is there to "assist the parties in reaching their own mutually acceptable agreement"...so I suppose that if we never reach an agreement to settle the dispute, we'd go to a formal hearing anyway? Is my understating correct?