Let’s see how far a little search-optimized blog ranting goes (I hope we get to reach front page for queries on my metropolis’ power distribution utility, “Meralco”).
Don’t believe that crap Meralco gives you in their television, newspaper and billboard advertisements. They say they have an efficient customer service desk you can always count on for help, but it turns out they’re not so great after all.
It’s been four days since we lost power at our place in the heart of Quezon City, Metro Manila, due to typhoon Milenyo and up to now we’re still in the dark ages. I thought yesterday’s power restoration was already permanent, but boy was I wrong. Just thirty minutes of getting home, the power went out again. And that was while I was taking a shower! Very timely, indeed.
I called the local barangay office (the local equivalent of the town deputies) and they told me they got reports of a step-down transformer exploding along our street near the corner of the Mini Stop convenience store, plunging the vicinity into darkness. Yes, just our short strip of Maginhawa Street. So you can imagine our frustration when the neighbors a few houses down the street are already shining in all their bright electric glory.
I’ve been trying to contact Meralco’s 16211 customer service number to no avail—it was always unreachable or I get one ring and then a busy signal. In fact, the barangay operatives had also been trying to call the Meralco call center and they didn’t have any luck with getting through, either.
I even tried caling the 117 emergency number to see if they have a direct line to Meralco, but it turns out they also use the Meralco hotline for cases like these. They did give me a Globe mobile number to send SMS to, though (0917-5592824). I’ve sent a handful of SMS messages but I haven’t had any responses.
So in the end, I don’t think anyone was able to report that incident. Things like these should take only about 30 minutes to an hour to fix! Now it’s been almost 20 hours and we still have no power!
A little backgrounder. Typhoon Milenyo hit Metro Manila quite hard that a lot of power lines were brought down (some by collapsed trees and billboards, perhaps). This brought power in much of the metropolis and neighboring provinces down in the morning of Thursday, September 28th. One can understand the difficulty in getting through to the Meralco help desk on that day due to the volume of calls, but would you believe it—I was able to get in touch with them to ask for information when the power would be restored.
Friday and Saturday were bright, sunny days, so we thought the infrastructure damage would already be fixed by then, but it seems we were wrong. No power still! By this time, we had to contend with the heat and humidity (compared to the cool, rainy and windy night the day the storm passed) and the kids slept quite restlessly. And guess what, calls to 16211 could no longer come through.
Count on a little force majeure to bring a big company’s communication systems down.
Now why am I so pissed with Meralco? Well, I think almost everyone is. While it is understandable for them to experience difficulties at a time like this, I would expect a company of its stature to at least enforce some measures to ensure its clients can at least get in touch with the helpdesk, especially during these difficult times.
It seems to me, though, that Meralco just disconnected their phone lines at the height of the demand and the ensuing days after. Talk about customer service! I can’t even send a complaint or any feedback thru their website. All I get is an Error 500 message!

I understand if their call center staff also have to go home to their families. But couldn’t Meralco also set up—or outsource—call center desks away from their service areas, say, in other provinces, too, so there would be redundancy in case disaster strikes in the vicininty of their main office?
If this were just any regular service company I would’ve stopped dealing with them because of crappy customer service. But this is a utility. And it’s the sole power distributor in the metropolis—so it’s a monopoly! It’s not like I could just switch providers at will. I have no other choice because they’re the only distributor here.
Yes, my Bayantel phone service also went down, but I’m not ranting much about it since it was my choice to go for Bayantel (cheap DSL+phone). I knew Bayantel service goes down when the relay stations run out of battery power during extended power interruptions, but I still stuck to the service. I could’ve opted for PLDT, but I decided otherwise. (Incidentally, Bayantel is also owned by the same company that owns majority shares of Meralco.)
So there. I hope you get to read this, Meralco! I couldn’t get in touch with you guys over the phone, thru your website, and not even thru SMS, so I’m writing my complaint here.
I pay my (expensive) bills on time (it’s not like I have a choice—you disconnect power only a few days after the due date). So I expect quality customer service in return. I know it’s hard to fix collapsed power lines and damaged circuitry. But the simple fact that I can’t even get through to your helpdesk a full four days after the actual calamity struck tells me that you suck at customer service.
Smart parenting starts with EZ Kids.
Tags: Business, Commentary, electricity, meralco, power, rants | Viewed 10119 times
33 Responses
hoop
October 2nd, 2006 at 12:44 am
1Move to Mindanao!
Typhoon free 24/7. We just added a 200 MW coal fired power plant added to our grid and there is another 70 MW hydro plant under construction
pardon me for pimping my island snicker
j4s0n
October 2nd, 2006 at 7:25 am
2I’ll give you a link back on this blog post – “Meralco Sucks”
jhay
October 2nd, 2006 at 11:26 am
3Right on! Luckily for you power has returned to your area. Our corner of upland Cavite is still in darkness. I talked to some family friends yesterday and they are all pissed off at Meralco. They’ve been loosing so much since they can’t open shop because of the power loss, plus the landlines are also dead. It’s been four days and I hope power gets back up soon again in our town.
Windbags and climate change » Pinoy Explorer | Blogging about of technology, science, health, biology, politics and among other things.
October 2nd, 2006 at 12:23 pm
4[...] I wanted to write about a few rants to Meralco but Sir Angelo Racoma of the J Spot has already done it, and done it good. Plain and simple, “Meralco Service Sucks!” Much has been blogged about Milenyo’s rampage into our country so I think I’d give it a little rest for now. Prayers and stuf goes out to all those who have been severely affected by the storm. It’s high time for some bayanihan spirit and for the government to step up and help those who are in need. [...]
vance
October 2nd, 2006 at 2:05 pm
5well. same sentiments here.. for crying out loud it took them 5 days to restore power in one of the key city in metro manila. Damn whats worse is that our pldt line is somehow depends on the electricity meaning no electricity no phone.. god, they should have improved this past years.. its almost 2007 na and still lousy service slow as hell plus I think they took a day off after recieving their salaries…
J. Angelo Racoma
October 2nd, 2006 at 2:44 pm
6@Hoop, yeah, I hear Minda is typhoon-free because of the proximity to the equator. So does this mean the toilet doesn’t flush counter-clockwise, too?
200 MW? Hmm. I distinctly remember a 200 MW geothermal power plant project passing through our department for analysis/endorsement back during my NEDA days Oh I’d love to have my own power barge!
@Jason, thanks. Better yet, link to the post using “Meralco” as the anchor text. That way, we get better hits from the raw Meralco keyword itself.
@Jhay, no electricity at home up to now. We’re bunking in with Caren’s folks for the time being (we used to live there before we moved back to UP village). Right now I’m at Figaro making use of the Airborne Access.
@Vance, I know the feeling. I know Bayantel lines die after half a day of having no power in the vicinity. But PLDT? Wow, that sucks! We even have phone service at our place. It’s only the power that’s still gone. It is frickin’ 2006 already, but it feels like we’re still stuck in teh 1980’s when it comes to reliability of these services.
noemi
October 2nd, 2006 at 4:57 pm
7Meralco Sucks big time. huh. I would be just as angry. When I texted you last friday, I thought you had already power since I heard over the radio that parts of QC were restored. To think QC doesnt have as much devastation compared to us here. Maybe they think your area has no problems at all so they don’t bother checking their text messages. Haave you tried the radio stations for an appeal? “Panawagan”
hoop
October 2nd, 2006 at 6:59 pm
8hahaha… nah it doesn’t… and yes we put on our underwear 1 foot at a time just like you guys up north… hehehe
J. Angelo Racoma
October 2nd, 2006 at 9:31 pm
9@Noemi, nope. When we corresponded via SMS last Friday I was at Katipunan and all my gadgets were going low batt. Even my phone was dying (was thinking of getting myself one of those low-end Nokia 1100’s that had one week of battery life).
Now we have power!
@Hoop, I hear the toilet flushes clockwise in the southern hemisphere, like in Australia and Africa. Just like how storms turn counter-clockwise here in the northern parts of the Earth, and clockwise down under. I’m wondering how it is near the equator or on the equator itself.
Cavite Still Has No Power at CarloRoxas.Net
October 3rd, 2006 at 12:16 pm
10[...] Not taking a bath for a day will get you irritable and uncomfortable, what more for 4 days! What irks me is that places where government officials lives had their power restored as early as Friday morning, September 29th. Do you need to be a powerful citizen before you get what you should have? J Angelo Racoma of the J Spot already blogged about the crappy customer service of Meralco so I think his rants are enough. It’s plain and simple, Meralco’s efforts in restoring the supply of power isn’t enough. They don’t even face the subscribers to explain and give updates. Not even a single Hey! Power will be restored tomorrow! [...]
Jhun
October 3rd, 2006 at 2:30 pm
11My god it’s been what 6 days and still no electricity. What are those people in Meralco doing specially those on the top management. Hope this sh’’ government would do something that would enable other than this sh’’ Meralco do their job. As time as i know it they have not acted swiftly on recurring problems such as this. Oh theres one thing they are good at cutting line for deliquent customer you can bet they would cut your line within a day or two or even less. Its seem they employ less people on the field than people who sits around the office doing nothing. So when preparing budget for next year they had to increase their rates to cover up for the salary of people doing nothing…..........
Jhun
October 3rd, 2006 at 2:34 pm
12Suggestion, could meralco replace their hotline number from 16211 to 1. Its a pain in a finger re-dialing again and again that 5 digit number when all i can here are busy tone as if they are busy…....................
Effect of Milenyo on Local Tech -- Pinoy Tech Blog - The Philippines’ Premier Technology Blog
October 4th, 2006 at 5:47 pm
13[...] The PTB Team are majority geeks and these creatures cannot live long enough without internet so imagine how much trauma we had in the last week. I transformed my blogmobile into a roaming office with that 90-watt DC/AC converter and hoping nearby coffee shops that have generators also have wifi. Unfortunately, there wasn’t enough power to plug in my HP laserjet and print out the certificates for Marc’s Isulong SEOPH Contest which was successfully held at Pier 1 despite the fact the wifi was scarce and PLDT WeRoam was crawling. [...]
JP Loh
October 4th, 2006 at 7:01 pm
14I can agree with the bad customer service but I’d disagree that Meralco did a bad job at restoring power. I can still see maintenance trucks/vans out there. I even saw some trucks that were subcontracted that brought power poles. For me it was just satisfactory but there’s still room for improvement.
What’s outraging is the stealing of cables and transformers. I’ve heard several stories even before the calamity.
thysz kapitbahay mo
October 4th, 2006 at 9:17 pm
15haay.. almost 4 and a half days din tayo nawalan ng kuryente dito.. as in no internet… buti nalang buhay pa yung linksys na free wifi dito sa haus namin… actually nasa tapat ng belcap yung pumutok na transformer… gulat na gulat kami ng sumabog yun… mga 2am, dumating ang bumbero akala may sunog… talagang walng kwenta nag meralco, it’s true hindi nga gumagana ang hotline service nila… haay…
J. Angelo Racoma
October 4th, 2006 at 9:32 pm
16@Jhun, yeah their customer service hotline is crappy. They should change it to a three digit number, at least.
@Carlo, I wouldn’t exactly make any quick conculusions to gov’t officials’ having electricity earlier (might be a stroke of luck), though. But the fact remains that Meralco was lacking in terms of helpdesk support.
@JP, yes, I agree with you. I do know the service crew (the electricians, truckers, etc.) tried their best. Too bad Meralco didn’t match that with a more efficient helpdesk. What about those people who aren’t abel to report power troubles?
As for the stealing, that’s really outrageous. I think that’s another reason why power took so long to be restored. I also think connecting jumpers (or hardwiring your residential electricity directly onto the mains, so you won’t have to pay) also causes these overloading problems.
@Thysz, hello neighbor! I remember putting an admin password onto that Linksys router. It was left out in the open without any security. What’s the IP address again? I think I also activated remote management. Heheh. What’s your approximate address? I know the pedia and OB-GYN who lives in the house in front of Belcap.
Smallville Season 6 Premiere » The J Spot
October 5th, 2006 at 2:17 am
17[...] Are the local stations already airing Smallville Season 6? I’m not really into local TV these days. I have cable here at home, but we mostly watch kids’ channels like Disney and Nickelodeon (mostly Disney). Smallville’s Season 6 Premiere was supposed to air Thursday, September 28th in the US. But during that time, power in our place had been cut off due to typhoon Milenyo (international name: Xangsane), so I had no way of knowing whether Studio 23 is already carrying the new season (it usually plays Smallville Tuesdays). [...]
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October 5th, 2006 at 2:26 am
18[...] I was unable to post about the Isulong SEOPH awarding night earlier because of the extended power outage we had in our part of town. I thought power would’ve already been restored, but it turns out we lost power again after coming back home, and it wouldn’t return until two days after. [...]
JP Loh
October 5th, 2006 at 10:52 am
19Coincidentally, we talked about this in a meeting last night (I work in the telecom industry; sort of). The typhoon was a bit unanticipated. I don’t know how many customer representatives Meralco has but the number allocated is based from patterns.
If their hotline runs on severa1 T1 lines, it’ll be 24 seats and channels per line. It’s not possible to have T1 lines connected and hire more CSRs in 24 hours. But you’re right though, they should’ve had a contingency plan.
We were talking about a problem with a contact center that does the customer support for an offshore company with millions of customers. The average calls they get per day is around four to five thousand but there are rare occasions where the number spikes up to twice the average. It resulted in some calls being dropped or just ringing without reaching our end. It is unavoidable unless it can be predicted.
Nick Nichols
October 6th, 2006 at 11:29 am
20Hey J. The toilets don’t flush clockwise down here in Mindanao … they simply don’t flush.
The PLDT Customer Service Swearing Incident » The J Spot
October 12th, 2006 at 11:09 am
21[...] It’s bad enough when your utility’s customer service desk lines are dead in the middle of a crisis. But what if your call actually comes through? And what if the customer service rep you’re talking to panics when you become assertive in making your complaint? What if he/she swears at you? [...]
ficariv
December 3rd, 2006 at 8:11 am
22Mabuhay ang Pilipino! Beat Meralco at its own game. Pay only for the power you actually use. Meralco gives us consumers more power than we actually use and we end up paying for it. Check out my blog at http://beat-meralco.blogspot.com
robbietan
August 11th, 2007 at 1:10 pm
23Guys,
I understand about the meralco millenium thing – heck we didnt have power in antipolo for a whole week !
trouble is, with a typhoon wrecking havoc on a metropolis with 25 million residents, there will be some loooooonggggg lines for complaints.
anyhow, there is epira. subdivisions can morph into a single meter and have preferential treatment and even have the privilege to ‘un-choose’ meralco. give it some time
Nick Nichols
August 11th, 2007 at 1:21 pm
24Robbletan – EPIRA’s not going to let you leave Meralco’s wires business – i.e. the business of getting power from the grid to your house. You’re still stuck with Meralco. You’ll be able to choose who “supplies” the energy (i.e. hands it off to Meralco to deliver to your house), but not who distributes it to you. And the typhoon thing was a “wires” problem, primarily. Not a supply problem – though there was some of that too as I recall.
Nick Nichols
August 11th, 2007 at 1:22 pm
25Robbietan – EPIRA’s not going to let you leave Meralco’s wires business – i.e. the business of getting power from the grid to your house. You’re still stuck with Meralco. You’ll be able to choose who “supplies” the energy (i.e. hands it off to Meralco to deliver to your house), but not who distributes it to you. And the typhoon thing was a “wires” problem, primarily. Not a supply problem – though there was some of that too as I recall.
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27[...] po for more interesting Meralco readings: link, link, link, link, link at [...]
mar
May 25th, 2008 at 6:43 am
28it is true that meralco’s opportunity for improvement is still vast but compared to other distribution utilities in the philippines, meralco has a big lead. i am a technical person so i understand this stuff. i would be very happy if someone posted a much more factual arguement. you know – no emotion, no suppositon – all fact.
ernie delacruz
July 2nd, 2008 at 8:58 pm
29Right after typhoon Frank left, power was restored in our area but not in my house. I found that the 2 cable wires were disconnected due to poor connection. We made a report to meralco, they came and look at the street and found about 5 inches of water, got scared and reported cannot do the job because it is flooded. Called several more times after the water is gone, they still won’t come. We waited and waited for nothing until all my fish died and all the food in the ref had spoiled. We cannot take it anymore so we decided to do it ourself and did a temporary connections hoping that they would come to do a more permanent one. They never showed up. Only in the philippines. SUCK.
ernie delacruz
July 2nd, 2008 at 9:07 pm
30To let them know where I live: 0021 espiritu st. sta cruz, cavite city. Maintenance of meralco is a big joke.
marvin
October 10th, 2008 at 6:47 pm
31How to install Solar Power
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SgJmPFAdLs4&feature=related
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December 22nd, 2008 at 4:23 pm
32[...] Meralco- Angelo Racoma’s complaint about Meralco comes first in the list. And yes, Filipina Mom’s who has to use her bitch powers to deal with [...]
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December 22nd, 2008 at 4:25 pm
33[...] Meralco- Angelo Racoma’s complaint about Meralco comes first in the list. And yes, Filipina Mom’s who has to use her bitch powers to deal with [...]
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