New York and Boston have gone to great lengths to eliminate "stray voltage," a phenomenon responsible for death and injury to both animals and people. Though Chicago's seen at least three such incidents, no similar effort is under way.
By Justin Hayford
June 9, 2006
THE LARGE ORANGE X on the sidewalk half a block from my apartment
marks the spot where my dog nearly died three months ago.
It was the first Sunday in March, about eight o’clock in the
evening. It had rained all day. I was walking Faustus, a rescued 45-pound chow mix, down Addison just east of Broadway, the same block we’d walked twice a day for close to four years. We were almost home, but as we passed a street lamp his back legs suddenly gave out. He began howling. In a few seconds the howls became screams. He fell on his side, legs spasming, his head lashing from side to side.
At first I thought he’d stepped on a nail or piece of glass, but I didn’t see any blood. When I tried to grab one of his hind legs to inspect it, Faustus bit my hand so hard he drew blood. As he continued to scream and thrash
about I stood paralyzed, stupidly
asking over and over, “What’s the
matter, honey?” The screams
abruptly stopped about 30 seconds
later, and his legs stiffened
with the grotesque crackling
sound of cartoon bones snapping.
A few people gathered around
as I tried to feel for a heartbeat. A
woman flipped open her cell
phone and stepped a few feet
away. “What do I do?” I asked
strangers. The only thought in my
head was, Who takes away dead
dogs? The police? An ambulance?
Perhaps a minute passed
before Faustus started screaming
and thrashing again. I tried to
pet him reassuringly while he
tried to bite hunks out of my leg.
He bit clean through his leash
and began frothing at the mouth.
His eyes bulged like eyes on a
ghoulish Halloween mask. As he
started biting into his left front
leg, he passed out again. I pried
his leg from his jaws.
The woman with the cell
phone stepped up and handed it
to me. An emergency vet was on
the line. “It sounds like he’s
having a seizure,” the vet said.
“Has he had seizures before?”
“No,” I said, as Faustus began
another round of screaming.
“That sounds like a seizure?”
“Yes. How old is he?”
“I’m not sure; he was a stray.
Probably five or six.”
“OK. It’s rare a dog that old
would start having seizures. But
just let him be until it passes. And
make sure you hang on to him
when it’s over because he’ll be
very disoriented and start wandering
away. We really need to see
him.” She told me the address of
the clinic three times, and each
time I repeated it aloud hoping
someone would remember it. I
was pretty sure I couldn’t.
A dark-haired woman in some
sort of medical uniform was
bending over me. She’d been
driving an ambulance down
Addison when someone flagged
her. Faustus was howling again,
but with less intensity than
before. The froth from his mouth
was turning red—he must have
bitten his tongue. He lay calm for
a moment, and the ambulance
driver tore a thin strip from a
terry-cloth towel and tied his jaws
closed. Then she asked a skinny
guy from her ambulance to bring
over a sheet. She said we’d pick
Faustus up, dump him on the
sheet, and put him in the back of
my car. Except I didn’t have a car.
“I’ll bring my car around,” a guy
holding groceries said. He
headed down the block while the
rest of us stood watching my dog
writhe on the sidewalk. The
ambulance driver and I tried to
position ourselves to pick him up,
but didn’t have much room to
maneuver. A large road construction
sign was lashed to the lamppost
and its metal legs, which
Faustus had fallen right beside,
covered half the sidewalk’s width.
The grocery man pulled his car
around and the ambulance driver
and I bent down to pick up
Faustus. Finally I shoved my
hand under his left shoulder. As
my finger touched the wet sidewalk
underneath him, I felt an
electric shock shoot up my arm,
like I’d just stuck my finger in a
socket. Faustus had been lying in
a live current for ten full minutes.
A FEW WEEKS after Faustus’s
gruesome evening, a chowcollie
mix named Barkis was
electrocuted on a sidewalk in
Brooklyn. Like the Addison sidewalk
near my apartment, the
concrete under Barkis’s feet was
wet and salty. According to a
news report, Barkis “went into a
fury so violent—eyes flaring,
teeth gnashing—that [the
owner] was afraid his dog would
attack him.” Beneath the sidewalk
was an exposed wire carrying
70 volts of electricity
intended for a street lamp that
had been removed in 1999.
The dogs hadn’t stepped on anything
metal: a 70-year-old wire underneath the
pavement had frayed, touched the conduit,
and electrified the concrete.
I’ve since found reports of
about a dozen stray-voltage incidents
in the last two years, mostly
in New York and Boston. Usually
the problem occurs when frayed
underground wires come in
direct contact with a metal plate
or manhole cover, but sometimes
wet concrete itself becomes electrified.
Typically rubber-soled
shoes insulate people from the
shock, but not always. In January
2004 a graduate student in New
York City named Jodie Lane was
walking her two dogs through the
East Village when the animals
became distressed. She tried to
help them, stepped on the metal
cover of a utility box, and was
killed; her dogs survived.
“This phenomenon is not mysterious,”
says Allen Taflove, a
professor of electrical engineering
at Northwestern
University who has studied the
hazards of electricity carried by
high-voltage transmission lines.
“The electrical infrastructure
gets old, and insulation around
wires degrades. Some of the
wires might have been buried
decades ago.” He says moisture
and salt contribute to the deterioration
and help conduct underground
currents to the surface.
“The wire is usually cased inside
a metal conduit. During a storm
water may leak into the conduit
and travel along the wire. At
some point the water may come
in contact with a part of the wire
where the insulation has deteriorated.
The water conducts the
electricity from the wire to the
conduit and then to whatever is
saturated outside the conduit.”
Cracks on the surface can carry
the current, he says, but if the
pavement is thoroughly saturated,
they aren’t always necessary.
“It turns out that concrete is
not always an insulator. Concrete
can be a conductor itself,
depending on its composition.”
One month after Jodie Lane
died a yellow Labrador named
Oscar was electrocuted on a wet
Boston sidewalk after stepping
into 100 stray volts generated by
abandoned wires leading to a
demolished building. The incident
got major news coverage,
and a month later the city’s electrical
company, NStar, took out
full-page ads in the Boston
Herald and the Boston Globe
announcing a plan to begin
inspecting its 30,000 manhole
enclosures and testing for electrified
grates. It also proposed
increased penalties for construction
crews that fail to report work
done near, or damage caused to,
underground cables. NStar had
discovered that another dog had
been shocked in Boston’s
Chinatown after a crew tried to
repair a wire it damaged while
digging up a street by wrapping it
in police caution tape.
The plan was carried out, but a
year later, in March 2005, a boxer
named Cassius was shocked and
killed after stepping on a muddy
spot where a street lamp had
once stood. The following day
Boston’s mayor announced the
formation of a joint task force
between the city and NStar to
devise a plan to address the
problem of stray voltage. Over
the next four months city officials
inspected 93,000 streetlights,
pull-box covers, and
controllers, 6,500 traffic poles
and boxes, and 1,359 fireboxes,
finding and repairing 62 sources
of stray voltage. NStar inspected
11,000 pieces of its infrastructure,
finding and repairing 3
sources of stray voltage.
In accordance with the task
force’s recommendations, city
and NStar workers began
reviewing historical records of
the city’s electrical infrastructure
in hopes of identifying more forgotten
cables. They adopted a
policy to inspect at least onethird
of the city’s entire electrical
infrastructure every year and
began replacing metal streetlight
covers with nonconductive material
and installing plastic insulation
in electrical boxes.
By January of this year two-thirds
of Boston’s electrical boxes
had been fitted with plastic
plates. Then on January 10 a
Labrador mix named Killian was
electrocuted when he stepped on
a round metal plate covering a
box on a busy street corner—an
insulator hadn’t been installed
yet. More troublingly, the very
spot where Killian died had been inspected the previous year and
declared safe. So in February
NStar began testing a brand-new
technology: mobile stray voltage
detection. The system mounts on
the back of a truck and can scan
electrical field strengths up to 25
feet away while passing at 15 miles
per hour. Two live video feeds
and a GPS pinpoint locations
where the field strength spikes.
In New York, Lane’s 2004
death caused community uproar.
A month after the incident, city-council
member Margarita Lopez
introduced legislation requiring
Con Ed to inspect all its manholes
and service boxes every year.
Then in the middle of March two
more dogs were shocked on a wet
East Village sidewalk a few
blocks from where Lane had
died. The dogs hadn’t stepped on
anything metal: a 70-year-old
wire underneath the pavement
had frayed, touched the conduit,
and electrified the concrete.
By September Lopez’s legislation
had passed. Con Ed was
now required to make annual
inspections of its electrical infrastructure
and to file written
reports with the city council, the
department of transportation,
and the New York Public Service
Commission. The law also
required the department of transportation
to conduct at least 250
random tests of Con Ed’s equipment
each year. In its first round
of inspections, from December
2004 to November 2005, Con Ed
tested 728,789 pieces of equipment
and found 1,214 sources of
stray voltage. Still, in February of
this year four pedestrians were
shocked, and two were hospitalized,
after stepping on an electrified
service-box cover in the
street near Times Square.
Perhaps the most troubling
aspect of stray voltage is that its
erratic nature makes detection
difficult, no matter how much
testing is done. “If a truck’s vibration
moves water into contact
with a frayed bit of wire, then you
can have stray voltage,” says
Taflove. “But another vibration
from a bus could move that water
away from the exposed wire, and
the stray voltage would disappear.”
About a week before
Faustus stepped on that fateful
spot on Addison, a nine-year-old
boy in Harlem stepped on a metal
plate on the street and received
such a strong shock he was hospitalized.
When Con Ed came to
check out the site, it found no
evidence of stray voltage.
WE LOADED FAUSTUS into the
backseat of the grocery
man’s car. The cell-phone lady
got into the passenger seat, and I
slid in beside my dog. Within a
minute he’d perked up a bit. His
back legs didn’t seem to work,
but he could hold himself up
with his front legs. His ears stood
up. He watched things going by out the window. By the time we
got to the clinic he was able to
walk unsteadily from the car. He
didn’t appear to be in pain or
disoriented—he looked alert
and almost happy.
The vet thought it was either
idiopathic epilepsy or electric
shock. “If it’s epilepsy, would I
have felt a current on the sidewalk?”
I asked. He said no and
noted that he had just read
something about a dog being
zapped on a New York City sidewalk.
He wanted to take some Xrays,
so I headed back to the
waiting room, where the grocery
man, whose name was Jeff, and
the cell-phone lady, whose name
was Lara, were still waiting. We
made small talk, mostly about
my dog. “He’s young,” Jeff said.
“He’s got three or four more
electrocutions in him.”
Half an hour later, the vet
called me back in. The X-rays
showed no damage to internal
organs, he said, but the real
danger was pulmonary edema—
fluid and swelling in the lungs—
which can be deadly and
typically develops in the first 18
to 24 hours after an electric shock. He wanted to keep
Faustus overnight for observation.
Jeff and Lara drove me
home.
Back in my apartment alone,
the sight of Faustus’s dirt-andspit
encrusted teddy bear lying
unattended on the living room
rug put a lump in my throat. My
chest felt like it was caving in. I
put the toy in the closet and tried
to go to sleep, but I couldn’t get
the image of Faustus going stiff
and motionless out of my head.
The next morning I drove a
friend’s car to the emergency vet,
went into an exam room, and
found a 90-year-old replica of my
dog. He could barely walk or hold
his head up. He didn’t seem to
know who I was. The vet said that
no pulmonary edema had developed,
but I should take him to his
regular vet and have him hospitalized
for the day. I thanked him
and turned to leave but Faustus,
for the first time since I got him,
didn’t follow me out of the room.
I got him home by eight
o’clock, an hour before my regular
vet’s office opened. Faustus
tried to climb the stairs of my
third-floor walk-up but fell over on the second step. I carried him up like he was dead. Once inside
my apartment he stumbled to his
favorite corner of my bedroom
and crashed sideways onto the
floor. I brought in his teddy bear
and placed it in front of his nose.
He didn’t move. I made happy
voices. He didn’t look up. I lay
beside him and stroked his thick
black fur. His tail didn’t budge. I
lay there and ran my hand along
his side for ten minutes or so.
Then he shuddered, stiffly stood
up, walked into another room, and
fell over. I went into the kitchen
and cried until it was time to
take him to the animal hospital.
When I picked him up that
evening he hadn’t improved at
all. “Good news,” Dr. Wallis said.
“No pulmonary edema. So we’re
out of the woods.”
“But what about the rest of
him?” I asked.
“Well, I’ve never had an electrocution
case,” he said, “and neither
have any of the other doctors here.
Based on the literature and case
studies, the prognosis is guarded
to poor. But those are mostly cases
involving cats chewing through
electrical cords in the house. So
with your dog, I don’t know. The
bottom line is, either neurons
regenerate or they don’t.”
THE NEXT MORNING, I called my
alderman’s office and
explained what had happened.
“Oh my God!” the staffer shrieked.
“I’ll send a truck out immediately!”
Ten minutes later a crew
from the Bureau of Electricity
arrived at the spot where Faustus
had been injured. They pulled all
the wires out of the base of the
lamppost. None looked frayed,
nor did any of the wires in the
lamp itself. I noticed the construction
sign secured to the pole
had a flashing yellow light
mounted on it—could current
from that light have run down
the sign, through its long metal
legs, and onto the wet sidewalk?
They couldn’t say. Could there be
a problem with wires under the
sidewalk? They couldn’t say.
A week later, at 7 AM, I met a
foreman from the Bureau of
Electricity at the same spot and
asked him about the possibility
of faulty wiring under the sidewalk.
“Well, concrete doesn’t
conduct electricity,” he said. “That’s six inches of concrete
there, and this is a very new sidewalk.”
I suggested we hose down
the sidewalk and test it. “That
wouldn’t satisfy me,” he said. “We
need to come out here on the
next rainy night and test everything.”
He painted the big orange
X on the sidewalk.
Another week later the construction
sign disappeared. In the
middle of April I got a voice mail
from the foreman (who asked not
to be identified by name in this
story). He’d been off work having
some surgery done, but his guys
had tested the site during a rainstorm
the night before and found
no stray voltage. “So it could have
been that sign with the light on
it,” he said. “For your dog’s sake, I
hope that was it.”
So far only two other stray
voltage accidents have been
reported in Chicago: in January
2004 a dog was electrocuted
when it stepped on a metal grate
where city inspectors later found
a clipped wire touching a utility
box. Four years prior, a dog was
killed and its owner hospitalized
after they stepped on an electrified
manhole cover at the intersection
of Lincoln, Sheffield,
and Wrightwood.
Judy Rader, a spokesperson for
ComEd, says that after Jodie
Lane’s death in New York ComEd
did an inventory of its equipment
and determined that its system
didn’t include the type of equipment
that caused Lane’s electrocution
(though she couldn’t
specify what that equipment was).
ComEd did survey a “randomly
selected, statistical sample” of
400 metal service pedestals—the
green boxes that connect a customer’s
home to the ComEd infrastructure—
and found no
instances of stray voltage. “We
haven’t experienced the same frequency
of incidents on our system
as they’ve suffered in Boston and
New York,” Rader says. “We don’t
conduct regular testing the way
the utilities there do.”
Matt Smith, a spokesperson for
the Department of Streets and
Sanitation, which oversees the
Bureau of Electricity, says a citywide
inspection of electrical
infrastructure is impractical.
“When we plow the city streets
we travel 9,500 miles. That’s the
distance from Chicago to
Madagascar,” he says. “Checking
every piece of equipment along
all those miles—we don’t have
the manpower.” (According to
the Department of Planning and
Development Chicago has 3,780
miles of streets. The five boroughs
of New York City, where
annual comprehensive inspections
are required by law, have
over 6,000.) Still, Smith says that
the department is concerned
about stray voltage. “We have
crews that go out routinely and
check for things like this. We’re
out there on the street. And
when a problem arises, we
respond as fast as we can.”
No matter how much equipment
is checked or how many
frayed wires are repaired, Taflove
says the danger can never be
completely eliminated. “The only
solution is to dig everything up
and replace anything damaged.
But then someday you have to
replace that. It’s the same with
any infrastructure: sewers, anything.
It breaks down.
“This isn’t one of those cases of
someone claiming magnetic
fields cause cancer,” he continues.
“The mechanism is clear.
The threat is tabulated in the
electrical engineering literature.
It doesn’t take much current to
cause the heart to stop. What’s
missing is a survey of the streets.
That would be tedious and timeconsuming.
What will it take?
Probably the death of a child.”
AFTER FAUSTUS CAME back from
the hospital I spent three or
four days trying to coax him to
go out for his daily walks. I’d
open the back door and he’d
slowly turn away. I’d make happy
voices and call him to the top of
the stairs; he’d turn and go back
into the apartment. I’d finally
carry him down the stairs, taking
him for walks that never lasted
more than a block, his right front
leg giving out every few steps. He
spent the rest of his time immobile
on the floor.
Then on day five he wouldn’t
let me pick him up at walk time,
preferring to nearly crash headfirst
down the stairs. His walks
stretched to two, three, four
blocks. I made sure neither of us
ever stepped on anything metal
or wet. Somewhere around day
seven, I saw his tail wag. He vomited
up four inches of his old
leash. On day ten he stumbled
only a few times during his walk.
On day 17 I joyfully told him to go
away when he wouldn’t get out
from underfoot while I was
trying to cook dinner. Within a
month he was the same goodnatured,
overeager, intermittently
aggravating dog I’d taken in.
A few weeks ago I inadvertently
walked Faustus across the
big orange X. He didn’t flinch.  Send a letter to the editor.
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Debbie at 5:03 PM on 12/2/2007
I am so sorry to read what happened to you and your loving furry friend. My sister had her little 4 lb westie puppy chew into an electrical cord under the bed and little Tara is at the vets as I write this. Hopefully and prayerfully this little 8 week old baby dog will survive and have a happy ending like your baby. Thankyou for sharing!
Deb
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bob at 8:23 PM on 12/11/2007
This is unbelievable. The people of Chicago should be outraged that this is happening. To whom should we call at the Bureau of Electricity. Aldermen should be the flagraisers of this issue before someone (not just their dogs) gets electrocuted.
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