Sentences with phrase «bury utility lines»

One is, should elected officials who are convicted of felonies have their pensions revoked, and another has to deal with the Adirondack Park and the Catskill Park, the Forever Wild clause, whether they can essentially tinker with that a little bit, so that they can make it easier to do road repair and bury utility lines and put cable and broadband so there is another way to amend the constitution.
Supporters of the ban claim the vehicles depress property values and leak fluids that damage grass, trees, and buried utility lines.

Not exact matches

Burying all those utility lines would certainly be a good stimulus program for the economy.
The Long Island Power Authority is mulling a plan that would bring more transparency to utility policy while also having communities pay for the costs of buried lines.
Your affected local utility companies will be notified about your intent to dig and will send locators to your dig site to mark the approximate location of buried lines with flags or paint.
Some utility lines may be buried at a shallow depth, and an unintended shovel thrust can bring you right back to square one - facing potentially dangerous and / or costly consequences.
We haven't been able to get the utility to consider burying the line, even though it will again be taken out if we get another heavy wind.
... Grantee shall construct and install all electric gathering lines, conduit, fiber optics and cables for the collection of electricity (and related data) from the WTGs of the Wind Energy Project underground, buried to a depth of at least forty (40) inches, to the point of connection with any Utility and / or Collection Substation.
The utility wants to recoup billions from North Carolina ratepayers to bury power lines, replace equipment, and install sensors to limit outages.
However, buried in another set of comments submitted to the EPA's regulatory reform task force by utility companies via UARG is the line: «UARG encourages EPA to acknowledge that once it has promulgated emission guidelines for a source category, the CAA does not give the Agency authority to revisit those guidelines and make them more stringent.»
However, buried in another set of comments submitted to the EPA's regulatory reform task force by utility companies via UARG is the line: ``
With so many underground utilities today, there is an exposure for striking and damaging any number of buried lines such as water, sewer, oil, gas, cable TV, fibre optics, electrical, phone lines, etc..
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