Just wanted to make a few comments on the topic at hand here. First, putting all feeders underground would be a tremendous endeavor to say the least. That would require any utility company to get easements from the general public (towns, property owners, etc) to allow utility companies to run these feeders under ground. There are many technologies that are out there, but you are running feeders (13KV, primary or secondary) that are in large diameter underground. I am pretty confident that the general public would not be to happy having trenches or excavations through out their neighborhoods. There were a few posts that mentioned salt or water causing problems, underground feeders are buried at certain depths that take this into effect. Meaning, that most lines are buried deep enough that this issue is not an issue (usually). All the outages were caused by down trees, so one topic that I did not see on previous posts was tree maintenance. Now, this can be a very touchy topic because of the fact that there are so many different cities, townships, boroughs etc... The question sometimes arises, who is responsible, I personally do not know, but someone is, right? Now this passed weekend, we had a very freak storm at this time of the year. Most of the southern region of New York State and northern New Jersey foliage was still on the trees, mixed with the snow and we all know what happened. Would this topic be an issue if the storm happened during the winter, when there was no foliage, probably not. For most of the general public power in Westchester power was restored by Wednesday/Thursday, far ahead of neighboring communities. Now there might be some areas still with out power, but it seems to be going on as accounts from tri-state new agencies. The tri-state area has a vast, intricate power grid and unfortunately when events happen the events have devastating.