With copper prices spiking, incidents of vandalism and wire theft in 91原创 City are following suit 鈥 to the point that it will cost taxpayers roughly 10 times the amount engineering staff had budgeted for 2011.
Gary Vlieg, the City鈥檚 director of engineering, provided council with some rather shocking figures at its Oct. 3 meeting.
As of Sept. 30, he reported, wire theft in 2011 had cost the City $80,000. That鈥檚 compared to $8,500 in damage for all of 2010.
On top of that, he said, the first weekend in October was a particularly prolific time for thieves.
鈥淲e were very severely hit across the City in one weekend,鈥 said Vlieg, adding that industrial areas, parks and residential neighbourhoods were all hit.
The forecast is that wire theft will cost the City, which occupies just four square miles, about $110,000 this year. That would take the municipality between 1,000 and 1,100 per cent over budget, Vlieg said.
However last weekend鈥檚 crime spree had him adjusting those numbers significantly upward.
鈥淚t could hit as high as $150,000 just in wire (theft related costs), if it keeps happening at the same rate,鈥 he said.
鈥淲hat kind of resale value does wire have,鈥 asked Councillor Rudy Storteboom. 鈥淚s it pennies on the dollar?鈥
鈥淭hat鈥檚 correct,鈥 replied Vlieg.
Copper worth about $20 to a thief can cause thousands of dollars in damage and repairs, he said.
Between replacement materials, staff callouts, contractors and police attendance, 鈥渋t gets very expensive, very quickly,鈥 said Vlieg.
Wire theft is not only costly, it can be extremely dangerous to the public if an energized pole has been vandalized, he noted.
Both staff and council used the televised meeting to encourage residents to phone police when they see something out of the ordinary.
Anyone working around a pole or electrical device, particularly late at night, who is not in a City of 91原创 vehicle or Cobra Electric truck, is more than likely stealing wire.
鈥淐all 911,鈥 said Vlieg.
鈥淪ometimes people wonder if it does any good to make that call,鈥 said Mayor Peter Fassbender. 鈥淲e鈥檙e encouraging the public to make the call.鈥
Metal theft is a problem in every community, the mayor said, adding that the province has indicated it is working on legislation for the purchase and tracking of metal. The goal is to create consistent practices from one community to another in the effort to stem the fencing of stolen copper.
Vandalism to City parks is also up, Vlieg reported. Although the figures are in line with the $68,840 that was budgeted for 2011, that鈥檚 roughly a 20 per cent increase over last year鈥檚 figure.