Nebraska MEMBERS UTILITY 1
Transcription
Nebraska MEMBERS UTILITY 1
MEMBER THE OFFICIAL NEWSLETTER FOR MEMBER UTILITIES OF DIGGERS HOTLINE OF NEBRASKA/NEBRASKA 811 UTILITY ISSUE #1 NOV 2013 1 EYE IN THE SKY Dan Maschka Public Awareness Manager. Northern Natural Gas Recently, pipeline companies have experienced an increase in the number of agricultural related excavations causing damage to rural pipeline facilities. Drain tile installation, one of the main types of agricultural excavations, is on the rise and is one of the leading causes of pipeline damage. For many years, pipeline companies have relied on an aerial patrol program as one method to conduct pipeline surveillance. Some excavators refer to the program as the “Eye in the Sky.” Over the last few years, pipeline companies have significantly increased the amount of time surveillance planes are in the air. The airplanes are capable of covering vast rural areas in an efficient manner. The specially trained pilots identify agricultural related excavations in remote areas that might otherwise go unnoticed. If an excavation site is observed near a pipeline, the pilot attempts to communicate with the excavator on the ground and contacts the local field operating office to dispatch an employee to the area. Drain tile installations are not the only excavations being observed by the Eye in the Sky. In fact, most agricultural related excavations spotted from the air require a OneCall request. The extra surveillance has paid off; the aerial patrol has identified more agricultural related excavations for which the excavator initiated a One-Call request prior to digging. Getting the pipelines marked before digging helps to keep you, your family, coworkers and community safe. The Nebraska One-Call law provides for an exemption of “tilling of soil and gardening for seeding and other agricultural purposes”. However a One-Call request should be made for all other types of agricultural excavations such as tree line removal, digging a pit, building waterways, sub-soiling, chisel plowing, drain tiling, setting posts, water and irrigation well drilling, terracing projects and pond building to name a few. Using the OneCall system is easy, it’s free and it’s the law. Call 811 before every digging project. 2 Aerial View of Drain Tile Installation 3 MANDATORY RESPONSE TO LOCATE NOTIFICATIONS Member Utilities are required per Nebraska Statutes to respond to ALL notices of excavation submitted via the One Call by either “Marking” their underground facilities or by providing an “All Clear” to the excavator. (76-2323) www.ne1call.com/ne-law-enforcement/nebraska-statutes/ 4 5 REPORTING DAMAGES – IT’S THE LAW! 76-2326. Damage; duty of excavator. If any underground facility is damaged, dislocated, or disturbed before or during excavation, the excavator shall immediately notify the center. An excavator shall not conceal or attempt to conceal damage, dislocation, or disturbance of an underground facility and shall not repair or attempt to repair the underground facility unless authorized by the operator of the underground facility. Although the above Statute has been in place for almost 20 years, damages still often go unreported or are only reported to the affected utility and not directly to the One Call Center. As a Member Utility, it is your responsibility to ensure all damages to underground facilities are reported directly to the One Call Center, by the excavator that incurred the damage. If an excavator has contacted you directly to report damage to your underground facility, they have not fulfilled their duties to be compliant with 76-2326. Please advise them of their need to call the One Call Center to report the damage. http://www.ago.ne.gov/complaint SIMPLIFY 6 YOUR TICKET RESPONSES Ticket Check is a FREE service available to all Nebraska Member Utilities. This web based Locator Ticket Management System (LTMS) will allow you to efficiently manage all of your One Call Locate Notifications while providing real time, statutory required response statuses back to the requesting excavator. Schedule an onsite demonstration of LTMS for your Organization by contacting Susan Lynch at susanlynch@occinc.com or 402-502-3990. 7 REPORTING A ONE CALL VIOLATION Whether you are in Box Butte or Douglas County, the scenario is the same… The Excavator calls in the locate request as the backhoe runs in the background. The Excavator has no intention of waiting for the utilities to locate within 2 business days – he’s a gamblin’ man, and plans to take his chances…AGAIN! Violation of the Nebraska One Call Notification Act knows no boundaries and consistently occurs across the State. Many times the offender is an excavator that works in multiple counties and incurs multiple violations across those county lines. If the backhoe is running in the background over your underground facility, there is a good chance that same backhoe will be running over another utility next week in another county. If no one reports the violations and just chalks it up to a “one time occurrence”, the behavior will continue until damage, injury or death puts a stop to it. Failure to report a violation not only puts the public and underground infrastructure at risk, it allows the continuous cycle without any paper trail of historical offenses. Simply put, if violations are not being reported, how does one address the non-compliant behavior? The Nebraska Attorney General’s office enforces the Nebraska One Call Notification Act and expects all Stakeholders of underground damage prevention to report any violations of the Act to their office. A form for reporting violations is available for download via the Digger’s Hotline Website www.ne1call.com/ne-law-enforcement/nebraska-statutes/. Inquire within your Organization whether a process is in place to report One Call Violations. When a process has been established, ensure you have communicated that process with all field employees, as they are the eyes and ears of violation reporting. When completing the One Call Violation Report, please provide as much detail as possible. Dates, location, pictures, associated One Call tickets, company name – etc. For additional information on how to file a complaint, please visit: http://www.ago.ne.gov/complaint. 8 Common Excavator violations include, but are not limited to: • Digging without a One Call Ticket • Digging before the ticket start time and/or before all the notified utilities have responded • Digging outside the scope of work as described on the One Call Ticket • Providing poor information regarding the upcoming excavation • Failure to report a damaged utility to the One Call Center Common Member Utility violations include, but are not limited to: • Failure to respond to a locate notification • Incorrect Locates • Unregistered utility with the One Call Center 9 COMING SOON . . . Nebraska One Call Gets It’s “811” On! On November 1, 2013 there will be a new look and name for the Nebraska One Call System, Digger’s Hotline of Nebraska. Utilizing the talents of the One Call Concepts, Inc. Creative Team; a new logo and website will introduce the newly adopted name of Nebraska811, expanding on the consistent 811 branding emerging across the United States in the One Call Industry. There will be no changes to the services and technologies of the current system – just a great new look! Stay tuned for updates regarding the upcoming website and logo launch on November 1st! SAFE DIGGING goes Social - PASS IT ON! 10 Digger’s Hotline hosts both a Twitter feed and a Facebook account (click below icons) allowing us to share real time important announcements and upcoming events with our social media fans. Help us spread the word by linking our website, twitter and facebook accounts on your company website! 11 Users’ Group & Technology Committee Meeting James Holzer One Call Concepts, Inc. One Call Concepts, Inc. (OCC) held its 14th Users’ Group on September 25th and 26th at the Royal Sonesta Hotel in New Orleans, Louisiana. Eighty-four customers and employees gathered to connect, learn and share ideas about damage prevention around the country. In addition to a review of forthcoming technologies, this year’s event featured words of welcome by Jeff Wiese of PHMSA, a review of CGA activities by Khrysanne Kerr, discussions of effective methods of advertising led by Chris McMurry of MGH advertising, presentations on joint efforts at damage reduction in Maryland by two major facility operators, a review of the method and importance of setting strategic goals by Board members from Iowa One Call and a special presentation by Cliff Meidl, former Olympian and advocate for damage prevention. Since 1997, OCC has annually sponsored a day and a half conference as an open forum for their customers to network and share ideas or concerns. The economy forced a “hold” on the popular conference in 2009 and 2010, but it returned more popular than ever in 2011. Customers were very happy to again have the opportunity to meet with peers from around the country and OCC’s leadership team. Meetings have traditionally had three main components: information about upcoming changes in OCC technology, expert speakers from the wider industry or regulatory community, and presentations made or discussions led by OCC’s customers. The overall goal is to foster an information exchange among all participants in an effort to reduce damages. If you would like more information about attending the 2014 meeting, please visit www.occinc.com or contact Susan Lynch at 402-676-4740 or susanlynch@occinc.com. 12 (L-R) Matt Ruddo, John Buckley, Jill Geyer, Tyler Nesheim, Dave Stroebele with the 811 Bike Olympic Athlete Cliff Meidl Brian Peschel from OCC Systems Div. Khrysanne Kerr from the CGA Iowa One Call’s John Barber 13 ITIC and your BOTTOM LINE From the desktop of ITIC and IMAP Your online Damage Prevention resource center Over 59% of Nebraska excavators and utilities currently utilize the ITIC technology to submit and manage their one call locate requests online. Some of the advantages of using ITIC include instant ticket confirmations, interactive map technologies and ticket data storage/retrieval. Another, often overlooked, advantage of the ITIC technology for the Member Utilities involves a significant savings on Locate Notifications. When a Member Utility receives a One Call Locate Notification that was submitted via ITIC, an automatic $ .35 discount is applied to that Notification. That may not seem like much, until you do the math. Number of Notifications received by Utility per month 500 Potential Monthly Savings if all were submitted via ITIC 500 x $ .35 = $175.00 Potential Annual Savings $175.00 X 12 = $ 2100.00 The best part, there is no additional work or overhead needed from your Organization to realize the potential savings gained via ITIC. Simply communicate to both your internal employees and your area excavators the benefits of ITIC and encourage them to get on board. FREE training is available either onsite at your Organization or over the phone. Contact Susan Lynch susanlynch@occinc.com for additional information or to schedule training. HELP SPREAD THE 811 MESSAGE 14 Building permits and Public Outreach Please ensure you provide all City Building Permit applicants information regarding the need to contact Digger’s Hotline at least 2 business days in advance of the their building project. To assist you in the education process, Digger’s Hotline has created educational flyers for you to display and distribute at the time of the permit application. The 811 Safe Digging fliers are available for download via our website at http://www.ne1call.com/ resources/education-and-training-center/. Other ways to spread the Safe Digging Message to your city residents: • Add a link to Digger’s Hotline on your city websites • Include our educational flyers in your monthly customer invoice mailings • Provide white marking flags to all applicants of building permits and educate them on the importance of pre-marking the dig • Provide your meter readers with 811 Door Hangers to distribute on their routes • Consider hosting a Digger’s Hotline Safety Meeting for your area contractors* *For additional information regarding partnership opportunities with Digger’s Hotline, please contact Jill Geyer, jillgeyer@occinc.com or 402-676-1989. 15 MAP LINK Every Diggers Hotline One Call Ticket received via email contains a mapLINK. This url link can be found at the top of email message, in blue text, includes the dig site map along with the ticket. Once the mapLINK is displayed, tickets from the previous day’s ticket list can also be viewed. The interactive map will allow the member utility to view and compare the dig site location against the member’s notification area, enabling the member to see why they received the locate request. Members can use this feature to research tickets and better manage their notification area by redefining their utility registrations if needed, to avoid receiving tickets in areas where they don’t have underground facilities. Members can also use this tool to make sure the excavator isn’t digging outside the described scope of the ticket. Faxed tickets also contain the address of the mapLINK. This allows the member to manually enter the url address into any web browser’s address bar and view the dig site location. The next time you receive a One Call Ticket via email, click on the mapLINK and check it out! If you have any questions regarding mapLINK or any other features of the Diggers Hotline One Call Ticket, call the Administration Line at 866-711-7281 or ne@occinc.com. mapLINK BACKUP MESSAGES 16 Diggers Hotline of Nebraska offers backup messages to all member utilities free of charge to alert them of any Emergency, Damage, No Response, Incorrect Locate and/or Non Compliance Tickets. There are four different methods for receiving backup messages: TEXT FAX EMAIL PHONE Different methods can be selected for business hours and after hours. Any member interested in receiving backup messages by text, email or fax should contact Diggers Hotline by phone at 866-711-7281 or by email to ne@occinc.com. 17 WHEN TO REFRESH A TICKET Question: How long is a One Call Ticket good for? Answer: The One Call Ticket is not defined by a lifespan, only the marks are. The below policy explains the process of refreshing and maintaining the utility markings. • Markings provided by operators shall be valid for a period of ten (10) business days from the proposed starting date provided to the Digger’s Hotline. The person responsible for the excavation project shall renew the notification with Digger’s Hotline at least two (2) business days prior to this expiration date and shall continue to renew such notification in the same manner throughout the duration of the excavation. The renewal notice shall be valid for a period of ten (10) business days from the proposed starting date of the renewal notification. • The excavator is responsible for reasonable protecting and preserving facility location markings until no longer required for proper and safe excavation near an underground facility. If the excavator has reason to believe locate markings are obliterated, obscured, missing or incorrect, the excavator shall notify Digger’s Hotline in order to have the facility operator verify, refresh or remark the locate. It is important that all facilities are marked prior to digging. Notice to the center shall be given at least two (2) business days, but not more than ten (10) business days, before commencing the excavation. WHO TO CONTACT 18 CALL CENTER ADMINISTRATION: Tyler Nesheim General Manager tyler@occinc.com 866-711-7281 573-636-1554 Michelle Reed Database Manager micheller@occinc.com 866-711-7281 573-636-1552 Kim Boyd ITIC and LTM Specialist kimw@occinc.com 866-711-7281 573-636-1566 Toll Free Administration Line: 866-711-7281 TRAINING, EDUCATION AND PROMOTIONAL ITEMS: Susan Lynch Jill Geyer susanlynch@occinc.com jillgeyer@occinc.com 402-676-4740 402-676-1989 Follow the link for a full listing of the One Call Board of Directors: www.ne1call.com/ board-of-directors/