C Spire ready for 2020 Atlantic hurricane season
C
Spire's bolstered network and highly-trained staff is ready to respond to emergencies and widespread natural disasters if they occur this summer during the 2020 Atlantic hurricane season.
The official federal outlook calls for an above average season of up to 19 tropical storms (wind speeds of 39 mph or higher), 6 to 10 hurricanes (74 mph or higher) and three to six major hurricanes (111 mph or higher winds) forming in the Atlantic Ocean during the six-month period that officially begins on Monday, June 1.
C Spire hardens its extensive wireless and wireline networks and prepares its workforce for a wide range of potential disasters, including major weather events such as hurricanes. The company routinely reviews and updates its emergency preparedness and crisis communications plans and conducts drills throughout the year to test the readiness of its network and employees.
As we focus our attention on a safe and healthy reopening of our region, it remains critically important that everyone prepares for the upcoming hurricane season, said Carla Lewis, Chief Technology Officer for C Spire. Our preparations are designed to give customers maximum communications reliability at the time of greatest need.
2019 was considered an above average season with 18 named storms and six hurricanes, three of which were considered major, including Dorian, whose 185-mile-per-hour winds battered the Bahamas and produced 84 fatalities and $4.72 billion in damages. Two other major hurricanes killed 11 people and caused $35 million in damages.
2020 has already proven to be an unprecedented year for severe weather with record rainfall, historical backwater flooding in the Mississippi Delta and an alarming number of tornadoes. With multiple federal disaster declarations and more pending for Mississippi, first responders are preparing for the worst during the upcoming hurricane season.
These destructive and deadly weather events are stark reminders of how powerful Mother Nature can be, said Greg Michel, executive director of the Mississippi Emergency Management Agency. It's important for everyone to remain vigilant and stay prepared. Pay attention to weather warnings, evacuation notices, check your evacuation kits and develop an evacuation plan before a disaster happens. The Boy Scout motto holds true - be prepared, he added.
Lewis said all C Spire employees and contractors, along with an extensive suite of network resources, will be on high alert throughout the 2020 hurricane season, which begins June 1 and runs through Nov. 30. The company also is ready to activate its Emergency Response and Crisis Communications plans, which guide the use of resources and personnel during a crisis and the overall response to a natural disaster.
C Spire routinely takes precautionary steps and puts restoration teams through various training and test scenarios and masses equipment and materials to protect critical network facilities and cell sites. The company uses back up batteries and diesel generators at mobile sites and switching centers and arranges for replacement fuel supplies in case normal fuel delivery options are interrupted by commercial power outages or road closures.
The company operates multiple hurricane-ready super switches that provide added protection and service assurance for customers. The high-tech telecommunications switching facilities are designed to withstand a Category 5 hurricane with winds up to 155 miles an hour, connect millions of calls, wireless data transmissions, video content and other critical services daily for consumer and business customers. In addition to hardened and reinforced shells, the all-steel and concrete buildings house large-scale 500-kilowatt diesel power generators, a grid of back up batteries and other redundant back-up systems, operations and technologies.
Some of the structures feature a 9-inch think external steel-reinforced precast concrete walls welded to 6-foot-wide spread footings. In addition to multiple redundant power feeds, the buildings also boast giant diesel generators each capable of producing 1.65 megawatts of continuous power, enough to light thousands of homes and businesses.
C Spire also relies on an extensive network of microwave technology that can circumvent damaged or destroyed landline systems and ensure that communications can be routed to their final destination, Lewis said. Microwave technology can assist with communications during natural disasters when landline systems are down, she added.
In addition, C Spire offers companies of all sizes a suite of disaster recovery and business continuity services through commercial data centers that operate 24/7/365 with the industry's highest design, construction and operation certification through the Uptime Institute.
This infrastructure, our continuing network investments and our dedicated, customer-inspired workforce will help ensure that essential communications continue for our consumer and business customers even when we experience severe weather events, natural disasters and other life-threatening situations, Lewis said.
✔️ C Spire ready for 2020 Atlantic hurricane season
💕 Found this article helpful? Spread the word and support us!