Copper wire theft at Edison substation forces power outages in Pico Rivera
Thieves stole 300 feet of copper grounding wire from a Southern California Edison substation in Pico Rivera today, forcing workers to shut down the plant and cut power to more than 19,000 customers.
The cutoff lasted nearly four hours, darkening homes and businesses and causing confusion at traffic intersections where stoplights were deactivated.
Power workers discovered the missing wires about 1:30 p.m., according to company spokeswoman Vanessa McGrady. Although the substation continued to produce power, the absence of the ground wires posed a hazard and workers shut the station down while the wires were replaced and other repairs were made.
Electricity was restored by 5 p.m., and the wire replacement and repairs cost roughly $30,000, McGrady said.
The theft of metals has increased at the utility's facilities in recent months, as metal prices have risen, McGrady said.
To report anyone selling, buying or possessing stolen utility wire, call 800-78-CRIME. For more information, go to SCE.com/coppertheft.
sam.quinones@latimes.com
