That's a fair point. I gather, then, that electric power supply in Puerto Rico was unreliable to begin with. What were the frequency and voltage stability like?Not radio and TV. Essentially every station there has to have a generator, but if your tower was blown down, or the roof of your building blown off or the transmitter site flooded or wind blew water from the hurricane into your transmitter room, that had nothing to do with "the electric company".
That reminds me of the entry one used to see in the WRTH for individual countries: after the voltage and line frequency were listed, there would be a (yes) or a (no) to indicate whether the line frequency was reliable enough to run an electric clock.
There are fiberglass posts, too, but they don't seem to be widely used.Wood power poles in the tropics deteriorate very fast, yet there was never a program to replace all of them with cement or metal posts or take cabling underground where possible.
Undergrounding is expensive. In my Oakland neighborhood, we had a Rule 15b-1 utility undergrounding project, paid for by a fund comprised of assessments on all customers. There were quite a few problems with the program, and CPUC staff kept trying to kill it but for the wrong reasons, so it survived up to last year. It paid 85% of the cost of the undergrounding; property owners who benefited paid the other 15%. Our assessment was about $15,000, so that tells you that the total cost was around $100,000 just for one lot. Admittedly, our project was said to be one of the most challenging in the program due to terrain. But this was 15 years ago; the cost would be higher now.
Did the government run the telco, too?The same applied for decades to landlines. When I first arrived in 1970, it took me about 4 months to get a phone in my apartment... even with the push of a radio station.
Overall, everything in government infrastructure is deficient... from bridges to electrical power.