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Residents in a fire-scorched Altadena say they’re being burned by their power company’s high-priced plan to bury power lines in response to last year’s devastating Eaton wildfire.

Some locals may have to pay up to $40,000 to connect their homes to Southern California Edison’s new underground lines, which the utility is building to protect against future blazes, according to the Los Angeles Times.

“Residents are so angry,” Connor Cipolla, an Eaton wildfire survivor, told the newspaper.

“We were completely blindsided,” Cipolla seethed.


  Homes burn in the deadly Eaton fire. AP Homes burn in the deadly Eaton fire. AP

Angry homeowners in the unincorporated community of Los Angeles County are also infuriated that the SoCal Edison plan to bury 63 miles of powerlines could destroy local oak and pine trees that survived the fire.

Cipolla, whose home was damaged by smoke and ash, told the Times that he would have to pay between $20,000 to $40,000 to connect to Edison’s new underground line.

A neighbor received a $30,000 estimate for the work, Cipolla said.

To make matters worse, the Altadena residents have found dozens of SoCal Edison sites where deep tranches planned by the utility could sever the roots of precious remaining trees, the Times reports.


  Fire recovery has been slow and expensive. VCG via Getty Images Fire recovery has been slow and expensive. VCG via Getty Images

Homeowner Robert Steller said he’s trying to block the utility crew from burying a large transformer between two cedar trees.

The plan would “be downright fatal” to the venerable trees, Steller said.

The utility considers the buried lines an upgrade that it hopes will make Altadena’s power safer and more reliable.

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The underground wires will also lower the risk that the company would have to initiate backouts to prevent fires.

SoCal Edison spokesman Scott Johnson told The Post that his utility is trying to get government funding to help pay for the furious homeowners’ electrical connection fees.

A state commission says the customer must pick up the bill for such connection services, Johnson said.

Johnson did not know how many households were being impacted.

“We are undergrounding the lines to support the recovery and most importantly, our wildfire resiliency,” he said.

The utility is also working to protect local trees, according to the spokesman.


  More than 9,000 buildings were destroyed in the Easton fire Getty Images More than 9,000 buildings were destroyed in the Easton fire Getty Images

The Eaton fire last January killed 19 people and destroyed more than 9,000 buildings.

An investigation into the cause of the blaze remains ongoing.

Edison officials said a dormant power line may have sparked the deadly inferno.

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