A new report from BC Hydro says a concerning trend is emerging as British Columbians seek relief from COVID-19 restrictions by sprucing up the yards around their homes. (Photo - B.C. Hydro/Twitter)
A new report from BC Hydro says a concerning trend is emerging as British Columbians seek relief from COVID-19 restrictions by sprucing up the yards around their homes.
The Crown utility says electrical contact incidents involving weekend tree trimmers, gardeners and landscapers have soared 30 per cent since the pandemic hit last March.
The report says tree trimming is the most common offence as novice pruners drop branches across power lines, frequently causing outages.
More than 100 reports linked to what BC Hydro calls ``backyard logging'' have been received since March 2020, but the utility suspects the number is much higher.
It says a survey conducted last month found a quarter of British Columbians, about 1.3 million people, have had either a close call or actual contact with power lines or electrical equipment at some point.
Distribution lines through neighbourhoods can carry up to 25,000 volts while smaller service lines to homes can pack a potentially lethal 240 volts, but Hydro's research says most people don't know three metres is the minimum safe distance from any properly functioning line for both people and equipment.