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Most of the Springfield and Greene County government complex north of downtown lost power for roughly 30 minutes on Monday.
City Utilities spokesman Joel Alexander said around 9:55 a.m., employees were working on some equipment at a substation behind the post office along Chestnut Expressway, which caused an outage. We re not sure what happened at this point, Alexander said, But we ll be doing some checking and some tests to figure out what caused it.
Buildings affected included CU offices, the Office of Emergency Management building, the courthouse, city hall and jail.
Many of those buildings have backup generators, and Alexander said as far as he knew, everybody was able to access that backup supply.
City Utilities approves plan to extend weather crisis billing over 2 years; City Council has next move Gregory J. Holman, Springfield News-Leader © Andrew Jansen/News-Leader A look down South Avenue in Downtown Springfield on Monday, Feb. 15, 2021. As of 12:45 p.m. on Monday, the National Weather Service had the temperature listed at -2 degrees.
Springfield s Board of Public Utilities on Thursday approved two measures intended to manage costs linked to last week s severe weather energy crisis, as well as future events like it.
Now the new policies need City Council approval to go into effect, CU chief spokesperson Joel Alexander said late Thursday. On Monday, several council members expressed a desire to spread out payments for customers, as the News-Leader reported.