
N.B. appeals for calm after alleged assault on N.B. Power employee
CBC
N.B. Power is asking the public to cool down after physical assaults on employees and verbal harassment during hundreds calls to the utility over rising power bills.
N.B. Power put out a release on Thursday about two assaults on employees in the field but gave no details.
Spokesperson Dominique Couture said the utility would not release any details about them except that they happened in Shediac and Cap-Pelé.
One of the workers was pressing charges and the other was not, Couture said, referring all comment to the RCMP.
Sgt. Pierre-Luc Haché of the Shediac detachment told CBC News the force only had one report of such an incident, and it happened March 29 in Cap-Pelé. Charges are pending but not yet filed, Haché said, so he was unable to give any further details.
In an interview, Nicole Poirier, N.B. Power's vice-president of operations, described the aggressive behaviour among customers as an increasing trend.
"There's an increase in physical harm, verbal aggression, threatening behaviours directed to our field teams, which includes our employees installing the smart meters, our customer care staff and across our social media platforms," Poirier said.
"We want employees to feel safe in doing their jobs and, and that's what they're doing. They're just doing their jobs."
In addition to the physical assaults, Poirier said the utility has had about 170 calls a week lately that would be considered aggressive to their customer support team. Poirier could not say what a normal number of aggressive calls would be, but said 170 represents an "alarming" increase.
"Abusive calls where customers exhibit behaviours that go beyond frustration, I would say it becomes personally targeted, threatening or verbally abusive."
An N.B. Power post on Facebook about the assaults generated more than 600 public comments. Most appeared to defend the violence and blaming it on hardships caused by rising power bills.
Couture said N.B. Power does monitor social media comments and will remove threatening or aggressive ones.
"If it becomes a real threat, then security becomes involved and the RCMP is involved, but again, for us, it's important to have that dialogue," Couture said.
The utility's prices for customers are rising 30 per cent in three years. This year alone, residential customers face an average of $244 in higher charges compared to last year.

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