On November 15, 2023

Killington Select Board discusses plan for zero outages by 2030

 

By Curt Peterson

On Oct. 23, three Green Mountain Power (GMP) representatives presented their plan for eliminating local outages to the Killington Select Board.

Without electricity, wintertime Killington is just a very cold, very quiet mountain littered with dark businesses and houses, and hundreds of stalled lift chairs swinging in the wind. The town of 1,500 permanent residents hosts up to 20,000 visitors on a busy weekend. Without power, there’s not much for them to spend money on. 

Twice in December 2019 the electricity, which is Killington’s lifeblood, stopped.

On the morning of the 28th, a tree fell on a line in Mendon, a line that brings juice to Killington. For an hour and a half, everything stopped. According to a Boston Globe report, there were more than a thousand cold skiers stranded on the lifts, waiting to be rescued.

Select Board member Chris Karr remembered the other event — an announced power shut-down on Dec. 31 so GMP could perform “emergency repairs.”

“It was New Year’s Eve,” said Karr, who owns multiple entertainment and food establishments in Killington. “They had to shut the lifts down. It greatly affected our ability to do business.” 

Although the two 2019 incidents didn’t involve “car vs. pole” crashes, they represent the biggest risk of power interruption.

As part of GMP’s “Killington Area Reliability Project,” the presenters explained that the town receives electricity via two transmission lines. They plan to replace the Sherburne substation to improve connectivity and stabilize power by connecting the two transmission lines. Some of the equipment to be improved or replaced is 60 years old.

Two substations are involved in the Killington project, and GMP hopes to begin work on the first during 2025. Each substation will take about a year to be brought up to date.

The GMP representatives said their goal is “to improve reliability.”

Public Utility Commission approval will be required before GMP can add a new substation. The Select Board was asked only to inform Killington residents of the plan, and no action by the board is required.

The Killington project is part of a seven-year GMP campaign to guarantee “Zero Outages by 2030” throughout its vast Vermont power grid system. When completed, it’s expected to cost between $30 and $40 million.

 

 

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Ray Garrett, 62

January 8, 2025
Ray Garrett was lost to the many who loved him on his 62nd birthday. He had a heart attack while kitesurfing in one of his favorite places in Brazil. It was a beautiful day with steady winds, and Ray was excited to be on the water with his dear friends. Ray was born on Oct.…

Okemo, ahead of the pack

January 8, 2025
By Karen D. Lorentz Editor’s note: This is Part 2 of a three-part series that explores how innovations at Okemo and Killington enabled them to become successful and popular ski resorts that also contributed to the growth of the ski industry in Vermont and the East. Okemo Ski Area, which debuted Jan. 31, 1956, was…

A trip most dads can only dream of…

January 8, 2025
How many dads out there can say they spent 22-days and 5,000 miles in a minivan with their 22-year-old musician daughter as she gigged her way from coast to coast? Well, journalist and college professor at Castleton David Blow can. And now, after five years in the works having been derailed by Covid, Blow is…

Marble Valley Fire: Safeguarding businesses with safety solutions

January 8, 2025
By James Kent As the new year begins, business owners must maintain their safety standards as they review goals for 2025. In Rutland and Windsor counties, Marble Valley Fire’s fire safety equipment and services positively impact these efforts. Marble Valley Fire’s owner Mike Roy’s commitment to fire safety is deeply rooted in his extensive background…