Greater Wilmington Business Journal - June 4 Issue

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By the boardwalk A staple of the tourist season Page 23

June 4 - 17, 2021 Vol. 22, No. 11

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wilmingtonbiz.com

WEB EXCLUSIVE Economically speaking Recent events focus on recovery wilmingtonbiz.com

Community ties Hospitals forming advisory group Page 7

Workforce

StepUp Wilmington helps job seekers Page 16

PHOTO BY TERAH WILSON

Index

Upgrades: Steven Still, emergency management director for New Hanover County, and other local officials involved in hurricane preparation say improvements have followed in the wake of recent storms.

A STORM OF PREPARATION

Banking & Finance .............................4-5 Health Care ........................................... 7 Economic Development.......................... 8 In Profile...............................................16 The List ..........................................18, 21 Real Estate ..........................................19 Business of Life.............................. 22-23

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RECENT HURRICANES DRIVE EFFORTS TO IMPROVE RESILIENCY BY JENNY CALLISON hile the term ‘’infrastructure improvements” may bring to mind images of bridge construction and road repair, the concept applies to system upgrades and is at the heart of preparations for this year’s hurricane season that started June 1, officials say.

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“We’ve been very busy since [Hurricane] Florence,” said Steven Still, emergency management director for New Hanover County. “We’ve reorganized our entire operating structure. There’s no more city EOC [Emergency Operations Center] and

county EOC. There is one force, working together in one room.” Duke Energy has focused its attention locally on creating an electrical system that will better weather storms and recover from them quickly. “It’s about strengthening the grid to make it more reliable and more resilient to storms,” said Jeff Brooks, the utility company’s spokesman, regarding grid improvements. “We’re upgrading poles and wires and placing outage-prone wires underground.” As storms become more severe, Brooks continued, Duke Energy has to make improvements to its power grids to help equipment better withstand higher winds and flooding. Of great importance also is improving the system’s ability to recover quickly

from disruptions. The aim of recent work in New Hanover County has focused on resilience. “We have a self-healing technology that we’re installing on poles all around the region,” he said. “It automatically detects power outages and reroutes power to other lines to restore power more quickly. We already have some units in place in Wilmington and we see benefits happening every day and with every storm.” During Hurricane Isaias last August, a large portion of Wilmington lost power, but Brooks said in some neighborhoods the electricity stayed on, thanks to the new self-healing technology. See STORM, page 17


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