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STORM COSTS £11,000

P. AND T. DEPARTMENT LOSS

BULK SPENT IN WAGES

A snow storm which cost the ..Post and Telegraph Department well over £10,000, mostly in wages, descended on Canterbury Province one winter night last June. Telegraphic and telephonic .communication was lost with all outside stations owing to the severe damage to the lines, and the Department's officers at once faced the task of restoring service in the minimum time, cost being a subsidiary factor compared with promptitude. Information published at the time showed how the repair staffs worked willingly under difficult weather conditions, first to give temporary outlets for telegraphs and telephones and eventually to make permanent repairs. Now the Department's officers have been able to count the cost of reinstatement, though the interesting figures to be given in his article do not include special expenditure incurred in other directions, such as the prompt provision of temporary alternative means of communication. The damage occurred over a wide area extending from Christchurch to Kaikoura (125 miles north), Ash burton (53 miles south), and Otira (97 miles west) and including Akaroa, Amberley, Cheviot, Culverden, Cust, Darfield, Dunsandel, Kaiapoi, Rangiora, Waiau, and Waikari. All arterial circuits north, south, and west of Christchurch were put out of commission ' and a total'of about 140 toll and telegraph circuits were interrupted, while 1260 exchange lines serving about 2240 subscribers were also broken. MOST LINES SUFFER. • In most of the lines practically all the wires were either broken or badly strained, necessitating replacement, while many poles were pulled out of alignment and required to be re-erected and'butted. In addition, a considerable number of poles was broken and had to be replaced although the proportion of broken poles was small compared with the total number affected. In one section between Christchurch and Kaiapoi approximately fifty poles were either broken or pulled down, while between Christchurch and Dunsandel sixty poles were similarly affected. • x Although there was a good deal of damaged material to be replaced, the greatest expenditure was upon labour. At one stage, 154 men were engaged on the work of restoring communication. These included gangs from the Wellington and Dunedin districts and also a number of mechanicians and mechanics who had been diverted from their usual duties at Christchurch to assist in the repair ' work. Casual labour was; also engaged. The cost of material utilised for temporary and permanent repairs was £2804, while | £7986 was paid in wages, thus showing that the snow damage in one night meant a cost to the Postal- Department oJ. £10,790.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19351106.2.173

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CXX, Issue 111, 6 November 1935, Page 25

Word Count
422

STORM COSTS £11,000 Evening Post, Volume CXX, Issue 111, 6 November 1935, Page 25

STORM COSTS £11,000 Evening Post, Volume CXX, Issue 111, 6 November 1935, Page 25