
10,000 Baghdad Residents Get Power
Baghdad, Iraq -- An 8th Engineer Battalion project to provide electricity to 10,000 residents of three Zaphernia district neighborhoods was officially completed Oct. 2. The project is a part of the 1st Cavalry Division's ongoing effort to improve quality of living and safety in the Iraqi capital.
Most residents of Baghdad, and until recently the residents of these three neighborhoods, drew power from an outdated and overtaxed Saddam-era power network using improvised and often dangerous wiring.
Second to security, electricity is the most important thing to people here, according to a poll conducted by the 8th Engineers in Baghdad.
After the Zaphernia district council identified the need for the new power network, the 8th Engineers contracted three local engineers to oversee the project, which totaled $1.1 million in funds allocated to infrastructure renovations in Iraq by the U.S. government. Throughout the next three months, nearly 200 local laborers and technicians installed the network needed to supply electricity to about 2,500 homes in the three neighborhoods.
Existing high-tension lines that connect the area with the rest of Baghdad, whose capabilities were severely limited by looting, were also renovated as a part of the project.
Besides the electricity being restored, security has also improved in the Zaphernia area since projects to improve essential services began there several months ago.
Release #041010b
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