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New Zealand woman dies after power company cuts off electricity
supply
By John Braddock
5 July 2007
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New Zealand mother-of-four Folole Muliaga, 44, died on May
29, three hours after a contractor working for the Mercury Energy
power company cut off the electricity supply to her South Auckland
home because the family was late paying a $168.40 power bill.
The action rendered Muliagas electrically-operated oxygen
machine useless.
Muliaga, a Samoan pre-school teacher, was being treated for
cardiomyopathy, or a weak heart, and obesity. She had been in
hospital for a month, and was discharged three weeks prior to
her death. One of the children had fruitlessly pleaded with the
contractor not to cut the power because it was needed for the
oxygen machine. The power company admitted that Muliaga had appeared
at the door with the oxygen tube still in her nose, but her requests
to delay the disconnection were ignored. The contractor simply
responded, Im just here to do my job, and left.
The exact cause of Muliagas death is the subject of a
forthcoming coroners inquiry. A number of medical specialists
have cautioned that the very ill woman may have died of causes
not directly related to the failure of the machine. An Auckland
District Health Board spokesman said that although the power cut
had stopped the oxygen machine, Muliaga should not have been reliant
on it and would not have been sent home had she needed the machine
to keep her alive.
At the very least, however, it is likely that the distress
caused by the sudden cut-off of her oxygen supply, coupled with
anxiety about whether she could afford emergency health care,
may well have brought on a fatal heart seizure. While her children
called an ambulance after she collapsedfrom a neighbours
house as the Muliagas telephone had also been disconnectedall
attempts at resuscitation failed.
The tragic case has brought to light the growing desperation
of many ordinary people whose basic needs are being ignored by
profit-driven utility companies. With social inequality continuing
to escalate, tens of thousands of low-paid workers and welfare
beneficiaries are facing severe hardships as they struggle to
sustain their daily lives.
According to a report in the Dominion Post newspaper,
the Social Development Ministry deals with 32,000 cases a year
of people either facing disconnection or who have had their power
cut off. That figurewhich does not include the many who
have not registered with social agenciesrepresents about
two percent of New Zealands 1.5 million households.
Meanwhile, household electricity prices rose 7 percent on average
last year, and have increased 40 percent in real terms since the
current Labour government came to office in 2000. State-owned
power companies, which hold half of all household electricity
accounts, returned $300 million in profits in the six months to
December 2006, up $37.6 million on the previous six months. Meridian
Energy alone made more than $100 million profit last year.
Domestic customers, who account for 34 percent of all electricity
consumption, carry a major burden when it comes to supplying the
electricity companies profits. Residential users have the
highest electricity charges, well above those imposed on businesses.
In 2005, households paid 19.6 cents per kilowatt hour, including
tax, for electricity while commercial users paid 12.81 cents and
industrial users 7.74 cents. Moreover, while residential rates
rose last year, commercial rates fell 6.5 percent.
Resentment against power companies
The Muliaga household was similar to many others. The family
of six migrated to New Zealand in 2000 and was dependent on two
incomes to keep solvent. When Mrs Muliaga became ill and had to
give up her job, they struggled. Husband Lopaavea Muliaga worked
as a chefs assistant at the Centra Airport Hotel, earning
marginally above the legal minimum wage of $11.50 an hour. Early
during the day his wife died, Mr Muliaga had been on a picket
line with his fellow workers. They were on strike for the third
time in as many weeks seeking a five percent pay increase. The
hotel is owned by the Intercontinental Hotel Group, which made
operating profits of $NZ606 million last year.
The Muliagas had made considerable efforts to clear their power
bill, making two fortnightly payments totalling $106.90 the previous
month. However, they still owed $168.40, on top of current charges
of $136. The bill, which arrived less than a week before Mrs Muliaga
died, gave the outstanding amount as being due by June 13. But
Mercury Energy general manager James Moulder contemptuously dismissed
their attempts to make part payments. He said the bill was overdue
and attempts to pay it off were not keeping up. Making small
payments on larger bills does not mean you get out of that disconnection
process unless you come and talk to us about it, Moulder
declared.
Doug Heffernan, the chief executive of Mercurys parent
company Mighty River Power, persistently claimed that Mercury
did not know of Mrs Muliagas medical condition. He claimed
that the company had not put a foot wrong, and blamed
the Samoan-speaking immigrant family for failing to go through
the companys procedures to notify a medical dependency.
However, a TVNZ investigation revealed last week that their search
of company telephone logs proved that Mr Muliaga had called the
power company on May 1, when his wife was still in hospital, requesting
an arrangement to pay the bill in instalments. He was abruptly
told that because the account was in his wifes name, she
would have to ring herself.
News of the events leading to Mrs Muliagas death provoked
an immediate and widespread response among many people appalled
by the actions of Mercury Energy. The episode uncovered deep popular
resentment over the arrogance and high-handedness of the power
companies. With peremptory threats of electricity disconnection
a common occurrence, the incident struck a chord.
Tapu Misa, a columnist with the New Zealand Herald,
wrote that she had received a disconnection notice from Mercury
Energy when she had forgotten to pay her bill after the death
of her mother. The bill, which totalled more than $900, was required
to be paid within 48 hours. She sought permission to pay the overdue
amount, about $400, immediately and the rest when it became due.
Mercury refused. I wondered then what happened to people
who really couldnt afford to pay, the journalist wrote.
Echoing the sentiments of many, she concluded: Now we all
know.
Labors role
Faced with a rising tide of public anger, all sections of the
political establishment, including the so-called left,
manoeuvred to make what advantage they could, while deflecting
any attention from the source of the problemthe various
governments of all stripes that have ruthlessly implemented the
demands of New Zealands ruling elite during two decades
of restructuring, privatisation and public sector cutbacks.
Two days after Muliaga died, a group of 50 protestors organised
by the unions and radical groups mounted a protest outside Mercurys
Auckland headquarters, carrying placards saying Contract
killers and People before profit. However, while
registering disgust and outrage over the death, they were careful
to calibrate their political response to ensure that mounting
opposition was directed back into safe channels.
Protest organiser Joe Carolan, an official with the Unite union,
called for the companys CEO to be sacked, while another
demanded a law change to make it illegal to cut the power off.
The secretary of the Service and Food Workers Union, Jill
Ovens, said that five of the Muliaga family were members of the
union, and that the low wages they earned showed the struggle
faced by many union members. Ovenss comments evaded the
unions own responsibility for the levels of social inequality
that now existand their role in propping up the Clark Labour
government which has pursued the user pays agenda
over the past seven years.
For her part, Prime Minister Helen Clark rapidly moved to distance
her government from any responsibility for the death. She began
by pointing to the contractor, saying that the tube in Muliagas
nose should have been enough to set off alarm bells
and halt the disconnection.
Clark, who is behind in the polls and embroiled in a scandal
within the local electorate over Labours expulsion on fraud
charges of the sitting MP, Pacific Islander Taito Phillip Field,
struck a populist pose and shamelessly milked the tragedy. She
said the case, which was been reported around the world, conveyed
a bad image of New Zealand. We all feel not just embarrassed
but devastated that this incident of heartlessness by a company
and a contractor has gone around the world conveying an image
of New Zealand that we dont like of ourselves, she
said adding; We are not a heartless people.
Clark then rounded on Mercury Energy, saying the electricity
cut-off was a disgrace and that the public was entitled
to full accountability. Clark made a well-publicised
visit to the Muliaga family home and spoke at the funeral, criticising
the hard nosed commercialism of the power company,
and demanding it fess up to its mistake and repair
the damage. Clark referred to Electricity Commission guidelines
for retailers on how to assist low-income consumers in regard
to payments and to a protocol between power companies and social
service agencies on the subject, saying that the disconnection
was not within the spirit or letter of these agreements.
Clarks admonishments to the company to stop digging
over the affair finally pulled the Mercury Power board and management
into line. With the Muliaga family threatening legal action, the
company made a formal apology and company representatives visited
the home with gifts of Samoan mats and a $10,000 payment as a
contribution to the funeral. Mighty River Power then announced
it would implement new initiatives to improve the
companys ability to identify and assist customers who were
medically dependent or suffering financial hardship. The CEO declared
that the company was committed to learn from the Muliaga tragedy
by taking quick action to improve our credit management
system.
The government has now announced that it intends to toughen
the guidelines for disconnecting electricity in order to give
more protection to vulnerable users. However, the
new requirementswhich are unlikely to even have the force
of regulationwill merely require power companies to direct
consumers to services that assist with payment options if they
cannot pay their bills, to make sure there are no vulnerable people
in homes that face a power cut-off, and to allow no disconnects
on Fridays or during a weekend.
In other words, the burden of rising user charges for electricity
remains in place, with allowances simply made for the expansion
of credit facilities and time payments. Clark emphatically ruled
out any responsibility on the governments part to intervene
in the financial affairs of publicly owned utility companies.
According to Clark, it was not a matter of reducing profits, but
of ensuring that power companies did not make profits at
the expense of vulnerable people put in the sort of position that
the Muliaga family was in.
This is, however, precisely what has been established by NZ
Labor. In 1986, the Lange-Douglas Labour government passed the
State Owned Enterprises (SOEs) Act as a halfway house for privatisation.
Clark was a cabinet minister in that government. While the legislation
made a vague reference to the newly established SOEs delivering
essential services with regard to their social responsibilities,
the modus operandi was to act according to business imperatives
and to return profits to shareholders.
In 1992, the National government took Labours initiatives
a step further by splitting power generation and transmission
and setting up a power market. State-owned companies were thus
obliged to compete with the privatised distribution sector. The
result has been a system of electricity supply that has as its
goal not the meeting of a basic social need, but the pursuit of
money and the payment of ever-increasing dividends. A tragedy
such as that experienced by the Muliaga family is the sad, but
inevitable, outcome.
See Also:
Union pressures Air New Zealand
workers to accept loss of jobs and conditions
[2 May 2007]
New Zealand prime minister
ingratiates herself with Bush White House
[28 March 2007]
New Zealand's Labour-led government
loses parliamentary majority
[6 March 2007]
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