Tag Archives: having electricity installed in rural mexico

Downed Lines and New Connections

We hadn’t had electricity for a month when we had our first outage. Fortunately, it was localized to just one house, but still, I couldn’t help thinking–this was why we didn’t have nice things in La Yacata.

What happened, according to the neighbor was a large remolque (dump truck) was going up the hill and caught on the wire connecting to the main line to the house. The damage was bad. Fortunately, it didn’t tear down the main line, just the connecting wire, so there’s that, but still. 

I moseyed up the road to take some pictures and sent them to Super Prez, who made a report to CFE. CFE assured him they would be out in 24 hours to fix it. Super Prez also called the owner of the house, who isn’t living there currently, to let them know about the issue.

24 hours, 48 hours, 72 hours….came and went—no sign of the CFE repair crew. Two weeks later, the owner called and asked me if I could get Super Prez to follow up. Every time she called CFE asked for a copy of the electricity receipt, which we hadn’t gotten yet. So I sent a message to Super Prez, and he called. 

Not an hour later, a CFE truck zoomed by the house. Sadly, they disappeared into the horizon and did not stop to check the line. Later that evening, or the next, I forget which, a CFE truck was driving up and down the roads and finally stopped to ask for directions. Super Prez happened to be here with an update on other matters and got them orientated. However, since the entire pole had been mangled, it would need replaced and they didn’t have that on hand and it would have to be ordered. 

While we waited for repairs, the owners of two of the five houses that weren’t included in the original CFE project because of their location approached us to ask about getting the electricity connected. Measurements were taken and considered. Technically, they both were just under the 50-meter maximum from the last installed post. The problem was that the line would need to cross a road and that might cause CFE to say no to their connections. But, nothing ventured, nothing gained. 

So, both owners went to CFE to ask about it, but both were refused. They came to me with the new requirements, which I reviewed and sent to Super Prez. 

Requirements for Contracting:

  1. For Tenants:
    • Mandatory submission of:
      • Copy of the lease agreement.
      • Copy of the INE (official ID) of both the landlord and the tenant.
  2. Power of Attorney:
    • If the owner cannot be present to sign the contract:
      • Submit a simple power of attorney signed by two witnesses.
      • Copies of the INEs of the witnesses.
  3. Ownership Documentation:
    • Valid proof of ownership issued by the local delegate (applies to rural communities).
    • Copy of the current property tax receipt.
    • Valid proof of the official property number.
  4. Official Identification:
    • Copy of a valid INE, passport, or professional license (both sides).
  5. Tax Identification and Fiscal Status:
    • RFC with homoclave or current tax status certificate (issued within the month prior to contracting) when service invoicing is required.
    • Mandatory for businesses.
  6. Contact Information:
    • Email address and phone number with national area code.
  7. Technical Preparation:
    • Printed photographs of:
      • Electrical connection box (mufa).
      • Base.
      • Grounding rod.
      • Circuit breaker.
  8. Visibility of Official Number and Meter:
    • Printed photo of the official property number visible on the facade and/or meter base.
    • Photo of the nearest neighbor’s meter number.
  9. For Legal Entities:
    • Copy of the certificate of incorporation.
    • Copy of the INE of the legal representative.
    • Copy of the notarized power of attorney.

As we are neither an officially sanctioned independent community nor part of the municipio, the collection of documents was a bit hodgepodge. These included the new application, a copy of the property certificate, which served as the valid proof of ownership issued by the local delegate (Super Prez), a copy of the INE (official ID) of the owners, a copy of the articles of incorporation, a copy of the INE of the legal representative (Super Prez), a copy of the power of attorney, a copy of the current property tax receipt, and printed photographs of the electrical connection box, base, and the meter number of the nearest neighbor.

I organized this packet of paper into individual folders for the applying colonos and had them come and pick it up along with the photos of the various items requested in the list. One colono served as the guinea pig and took it to the CFE office where they were told that in addition to the paperwork turned in, he must present the número oficial vigente (official address number), which we didn’t have. 

Our application for those numbers had already been given to the presidencia and they were sitting on the paperwork. So, Super Prez went to the CFE office in Salvatierra to find out if there was a workaround.

The downed line did eventually get fixed, but little did we realize that this was just the beginning of our issues with CFE.

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Let There be Light – Part 1

Way back in July, at the very end of the pozo (well) update, I mentioned that CFE paid a surprise visit to La Yacata. I haven’t posted anything about it since. I really didn’t want to jinx it, and even now that the initial project is done and over, it’s still something of a miracle. But let me start at the beginning.

About a month after the letter to the governor, someone came a’banging on my door to tell me that CFE (the electric company) was down the road and wanted to talk to someone in charge. Um, well, I guess that would be me. 

So I hurried my fanny down the road and sure enough, there was a CFE vehicle and two men holding what appeared to be plans. I approached and they gave me the astounding news that we were one of three neighborhoods that the federal government would be providing electricity in the next few months. Say again???

So they did, and they showed me the plans, asked about who the president of the association was, and assured me that this wasn’t a prank. The contractor knew Super Prez, so they made immediate contact and set up a time to meet. I took pictures of the plans because NO ONE WOULD BELIEVE ME and did some happy jumping around. 

I had a few questions because this seemed almost too good to be true.  First, what were we to do with the existing posts and wires that had never been registered and, therefore, could not be used. The contractor said that he could remove them, although that wouldn’t be covered under this grant, which meant the colonia would have to pay him to do it.

The plans also showed several roads that would not be electrified as the roads themselves were in deplorable conditions. What about those? The contractor said he could give us an estimate for finishing the lines after the posts, wires, and transformers that were given by the federal government were installed. Fair enough. Finishing would be a fraction of the cost of starting from scratch, which is where we stood at the moment. The transformers were also small, and he cautioned that, realistically, they could only support 40 dwellings each. We don’t have 40 full-time residents right now, so that would be fine. Then, as the colonia grew, we could petition to have the transformers removed and replaced with those with more capacity. 

Super Prez was all for letting the colonos (residents) know about this windfall immediately. I suggested we wait a bit. It wouldn’t do to have everyone’s hopes up and then have it not materialize, so we waited and waited and waited. 

Then we got word that the CFE workers were digging the post holes in another of the three neighborhoods instead of La Yacata, which was only discovered when the CFE supervisor came to La Yacata looking for his crew, and they were not here. Obviously, there was some miscommunication somewhere.

Super Prez called the contractor, who assured us that yes, indeed, we were first on the list. He also said he’d send over the estimate for the post removal in the next day or so with the idea that the new posts could be placed in the same locations. 

A couple of days after the phone call with the contractor, there was another banging on my door. My presence was requested by the CFE crew, who were sent to dig the holes. I hurried my fanny down the road, and they asked if I could help them locate the lots so they could mark the dig spots. My copy of the neighborhood plans had been given to the contractor, but these workers didn’t have it. I had a miniature copy, but even with my bifocals, I couldn’t make out the lots’ dimensions. 

The neighbor lady, the sister-in-law of the now-deceased Chuchi, ran into her house and popped back out with some plans she had. It seemed she had been holding out on us. She claimed that she gave all the paperwork to Super Prez after Chuchi’s death. Obviously, that wasn’t so. Regardless, it was helpful since Super Prez was out of town, and we needed the plans. 

These guys had a tape measure that wasn’t long enough to mark the distance between the posts, so the measuring was an estimate. One guy would mark a spot with orange paint and move up, dragging the tape behind him. The other guy couldn’t ever seem to find the mark and spent considerable time hunting it before reading off the new measurement to be added to the first one to get the correct distance. 

I traipsed along with the plans, checking the lot dimensions as we went. When we reached the first corner, my husband showed up. He’d been out searching for seed corn to plant. When he arrived, the two guys said they needed his help to line up the posts now that the spots had been marked. So if he would stand on that orange spot, they’d go down to the end of the road and check the alignment. 

They hadn’t brought any stakes or anything to mark the spots besides the paint. So what they did was one guy stood at the bottom corner, and the other stood on the first spot, straight and tall, as if he WERE A POST. The guy at the bottom squinted and bobbled his head to see if the two human posts lined up. This process was repeated up the road at each marked spot.

I was laughing so hard at this point that I nearly missed a phone call from Super Prez. I had sent him a message saying we needed the plans. He called the contractor, who said the two guys had the plans. And well, yes, they did have plans, but those plans weren’t the plans for La Yacata. They were the project plans, and there had been some modifications since the project plans had been made, one of which was that the new posts were to be placed in the same spot as the old posts. Nobody had told this to the two guys who were marking on the opposite side of the road. 

Super Prez was going to send me to have a new set of the plans printed out, but he remembered he had a set at his house. He called the ‘chacha and told her to expect me. We dashed to his house, picked up the plans, and brought them back to the guys. When we got back, they had moved on to the posts on the main road, the ones that had fallen, and were doing the same measurement skit there. 

I have to say that these guys were probably not the most capable electrical road crew I’ve come across, but perhaps they were just the post-hole diggers, and the next group would seem more like electricians. I couldn’t wait to see what would happen next. 

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Filed under Electricity issues