Talk:93-year-old Michigan man freezes to death after electric company limits his power usage
Revision 758946 of this article has been reviewed by Planoneck (talk · contribs) and has passed its review at 16:52, 28 January 2009 (UTC).
Comments by reviewer: Interesting and tragic story. ~Planoneck~ 16:52, 28 January 2009 (UTC) The reviewed revision should automatically have been edited by removing {{Review}} and adding {{Publish}} at the bottom, and the edit sighted; if this did not happen, it may be done manually by a reviewer. |
Revision 758946 of this article has been reviewed by Planoneck (talk · contribs) and has passed its review at 16:52, 28 January 2009 (UTC).
Comments by reviewer: Interesting and tragic story. ~Planoneck~ 16:52, 28 January 2009 (UTC) The reviewed revision should automatically have been edited by removing {{Review}} and adding {{Publish}} at the bottom, and the edit sighted; if this did not happen, it may be done manually by a reviewer. |
Contradiction
editI haven't read the sources, but there seems to be a contradiction in a municipality having a law that appears to ban limiters in winter, and not mentioning that law in its press statement. To help readers (like me) who get very emotional when they read something like this: could you delve a little deeper, please, or otherwise address the contradiction? I don't think the article mentions that the power company is owned by the city government which would be a good start.
(by the way - thanks for explaining limiters clearly - I had never heard of them)
--InfantGorilla (talk) 13:41, 28 January 2009 (UTC)
- Apparently the ban is not imposed by the municipality, but by the state; however, the state ban doesn't apply to municipally owned utilities like Bay City, which aren't state-regulated. I added a source clarifying this. ~Planoneck~ 16:50, 28 January 2009 (UTC)
- Phew!!! Falling in the cracks between a bureaucracy and a loophole. What a way to go! --InfantGorilla (talk) 20:11, 28 January 2009 (UTC)