- Utilities of Seattle
Seattle (
Seattle, Washington , USA) has a variety of public and private utilities.Unlike most neighboring cities, Seattle's water and
electricity are provided by public city agencies:Seattle Public Utilities andSeattle City Light , respectively. Privately owned utility companies serving Seattle arePuget Sound Energy (natural gas ),Seattle Steam Company (steam ),Qwest (landlinetelephone service/DSL ), andComcast (and to a lesser extentBroadstripe ) (cable television /cable internet ).The city's
water is furnished bySeattle Public Utilities (SPU), an agency of the city, which owns two water collection facilities: one in the Cedar River watershed, which primarily serves the city south of theLake Washington Ship Canal , and the other in theTolt River watershed, which primarily serves the city north of the canal.Natural gas is furnished by privately ownedPuget Sound Energy , which began its existence in 1886, generating electrical power as the Seattle Electric Light Company. Nowadays, the city's electricity is furnished bySeattle City Light , an agency of the city, which owns numeroushydroelectric dams on the Cedar andSkagit River s. Seattle first decided to invest in public power generation in 1902, initially handling this as part of the water department; the resulting Cedar Falls hydroelectric facility (1905) is now the oldest continually operating, publicly owned hydroelectric plant in the U.S. City Light became a separate city agency in 1910, and, in 1951, bought out the last of their privately owned competitors. [ [http://www.ci.seattle.wa.us/light/aboutus/history/ab5_brhs.htm A Brief History] , Seattle City Light. Accessed16 November 2007 .] [ [http://www.cityofseattle.net/light/aboutus/customerguide/ Fingertip Facts] , Seattle City Light. Accessed16 November 2007 .]The privately owned
Seattle Steam Company , founded 1893, generatessteam by burning natural gas and wood, and provides it to over 200 business in downtown Seattle—where hotels figure prominently among its customers—and on First Hill, where it serves several of the city's largest hospitals.Most landline
telephone service is provided byQwest .Early water supply
The first water system in Seattle is credited to one of the city's founding pioneers,
Henry Yesler . He stored water from springs in a tank located on what is now Yesler Way between Fourth and Fifth Avenues, roughly the location of the Old Public Safety Building on the uphill east edge of the Pioneer Square neighborhood, site of the settlement that became the city. From this tank a V-shaped trough conducted water to his mill at the foot of Mill Street, now Yesler Way.Harvnb|Fleming|1919|p=20]As the settlement grew into a town and city, water from was drawn from
Lake Washington andLake Union . Various independent companies provided water to different neighborhoods. The largest of these was the Spring Hill Company, which drew water from Lake Washington.These arrangement soon proved inadequate. On
September 24 ,1888 , Mayor Robert Moran urged the city council to call an election to "determine finally whether this city is to have an abundant supply of pure water at cost, or continue to pay tribute to private individuals on all water used in the future."In a
July 8 ,1889 election, [Alan J. Stein, [http://www.historylink.org/essays/output.cfm?file_id=2123 Seattle voters authorize Cedar River Water Supply system onJuly 8 ,1889 .] , HistoryLink,January 1 ,2000 . Accessed online6 December 2007 .] barely a month after theGreat Seattle Fire (June 6 ,1889 ) gave a dramatic illustration of the limitations of the city's water supply, Seattle's citizens voted 1,875 to 51 to acquire and operate their own water system. In accordance with this vote, the city Water Department acquired the Lake Union and Spring Hill plants for $400,000. These plants saw the city through until the 1901 completion of Cedar River Supply System No. 1. [Harvnb|Fleming|1919|p=20–21]Notes
References
* Citation
last =Fleming
first =S. E.
year =1919
title =Civics (supplement): Seattle King County
place =Seattle
publisher =Seattle Public Schools. This is a public domain source, because it was published in the U.S. before 1923.
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