I find it difficult to believe
that thousands of Americans are living without electricity and have done so for
years. I have been on enough many camping trips where I lived for a few days at
a time with light from a kerosene lantern. There is a certain smell from the
fuel, but the thing I hate the most is the fact that the light is centered
around the lantern and the rest of the room is dark. I cannot imagine living
like that for years, and yet many people do. There are 15,000 people who live
their regular, everyday lives without electricity, but the number is starting
to fall.
The Navajo Tribal Utility Authority
typically connects from 400 to 450 homes a year, chipping away at the 15,000
scattered, rural homes without power on the 27,000-square-mile reservation that
lies in Arizona, New Mexico and Utah.
At that rate, it will take the tribal
utility about 35 more years to get electricity to the 60,000 of the reservation’s
180,000 residents who don’t have it….
Navajos without electricity also pack
food or medication in coolers with ice or leave it outside in the wintertime.
Children use dome lights in cars or kerosene lamps to do their homework at night.
Some tribal members have small solar systems that deliver intermittent power.
No electricity typically means no
running water and a lack of overall economic development. Creating the
infrastructure to reach the far-flung homes on the reservation is extremely
costly.
Hooking up a single home can cost up to
$40,000 on the reservation where the annual, per-capita income is around
$10,700 and half the workforce is unemployed….
There is a project in progress at
the current time to install electricity in more homes. The Navajos clear the
trees and make the necessary preparations. Then volunteer electrical workers
place the power poles, string the electrical wires, and make the necessary
preparations for each home.
I hope that the project can put
electricity into thousands of homes this year instead of just a few hundred.
Meanwhile, I will be extra grateful for the electricity in my home that brings
unnumbered blessings, such as light in the corners of the room and running
water.
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