Are these remains of electricity meter's anti-tampering seal?












1















This is an electricity meter on top of an old Zinsco panel. The meter does not have anything else hanging that reminds me of an anti-tamper seal. So I am wondering - has anyone tampered with this electricity meter?



enter image description here



If it is anti-tampering device, then are there any fines against homeowner? Should I try to track down the person who did this?










share|improve this question





























    1















    This is an electricity meter on top of an old Zinsco panel. The meter does not have anything else hanging that reminds me of an anti-tamper seal. So I am wondering - has anyone tampered with this electricity meter?



    enter image description here



    If it is anti-tampering device, then are there any fines against homeowner? Should I try to track down the person who did this?










    share|improve this question



























      1












      1








      1


      1






      This is an electricity meter on top of an old Zinsco panel. The meter does not have anything else hanging that reminds me of an anti-tamper seal. So I am wondering - has anyone tampered with this electricity meter?



      enter image description here



      If it is anti-tampering device, then are there any fines against homeowner? Should I try to track down the person who did this?










      share|improve this question
















      This is an electricity meter on top of an old Zinsco panel. The meter does not have anything else hanging that reminds me of an anti-tamper seal. So I am wondering - has anyone tampered with this electricity meter?



      enter image description here



      If it is anti-tampering device, then are there any fines against homeowner? Should I try to track down the person who did this?







      electrical-panel utilities






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Jan 14 at 6:11









      manassehkatz

      8,3591133




      8,3591133










      asked Jan 14 at 2:42









      Hans SoloHans Solo

      17312




      17312






















          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

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          4














          "Sure" - "You can assume yes" - However this does NOT mean someone tampered with it.



          Someone has not secured the meter with a new identifying marker that gives a power company or service person indication that no one has touched it since it was last secured.



          This doesn't mean it was tampered with, it means as I've noted, someone did not re-secure it.






          share|improve this answer
























          • Is there a difference from electricity provider's point of view? Is there a fine if, for example, one of the construction workers we hired in the past have messed with it?

            – Hans Solo
            Jan 14 at 3:00













          • @HansSolo That's a question for your utility, as there is likely no universal response to that question.

            – mmathis
            Jan 14 at 3:04






          • 1





            It depends on where you live, and what (if anything) they want to do about it. Basically, safety & theft are the concerns. If there is evidence of either & the power compnay or some official chooses to make an issue, they will investigate. But more than likely, they will re-tag it when around next. If you know nothing was done that wasn't supposed to be, you shouldn't need to worry.

            – noybman
            Jan 14 at 3:05






          • 1





            ps.... you could always call them and ask them to tag it

            – noybman
            Jan 14 at 3:07






          • 1





            Should I try to track down the person who did this? How would you possibly do that? Unless you have video evidence, anyone who you think did it (handyman, angry neighbor, whatever...) will deny it.

            – manassehkatz
            Jan 14 at 6:13











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          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes








          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          4














          "Sure" - "You can assume yes" - However this does NOT mean someone tampered with it.



          Someone has not secured the meter with a new identifying marker that gives a power company or service person indication that no one has touched it since it was last secured.



          This doesn't mean it was tampered with, it means as I've noted, someone did not re-secure it.






          share|improve this answer
























          • Is there a difference from electricity provider's point of view? Is there a fine if, for example, one of the construction workers we hired in the past have messed with it?

            – Hans Solo
            Jan 14 at 3:00













          • @HansSolo That's a question for your utility, as there is likely no universal response to that question.

            – mmathis
            Jan 14 at 3:04






          • 1





            It depends on where you live, and what (if anything) they want to do about it. Basically, safety & theft are the concerns. If there is evidence of either & the power compnay or some official chooses to make an issue, they will investigate. But more than likely, they will re-tag it when around next. If you know nothing was done that wasn't supposed to be, you shouldn't need to worry.

            – noybman
            Jan 14 at 3:05






          • 1





            ps.... you could always call them and ask them to tag it

            – noybman
            Jan 14 at 3:07






          • 1





            Should I try to track down the person who did this? How would you possibly do that? Unless you have video evidence, anyone who you think did it (handyman, angry neighbor, whatever...) will deny it.

            – manassehkatz
            Jan 14 at 6:13
















          4














          "Sure" - "You can assume yes" - However this does NOT mean someone tampered with it.



          Someone has not secured the meter with a new identifying marker that gives a power company or service person indication that no one has touched it since it was last secured.



          This doesn't mean it was tampered with, it means as I've noted, someone did not re-secure it.






          share|improve this answer
























          • Is there a difference from electricity provider's point of view? Is there a fine if, for example, one of the construction workers we hired in the past have messed with it?

            – Hans Solo
            Jan 14 at 3:00













          • @HansSolo That's a question for your utility, as there is likely no universal response to that question.

            – mmathis
            Jan 14 at 3:04






          • 1





            It depends on where you live, and what (if anything) they want to do about it. Basically, safety & theft are the concerns. If there is evidence of either & the power compnay or some official chooses to make an issue, they will investigate. But more than likely, they will re-tag it when around next. If you know nothing was done that wasn't supposed to be, you shouldn't need to worry.

            – noybman
            Jan 14 at 3:05






          • 1





            ps.... you could always call them and ask them to tag it

            – noybman
            Jan 14 at 3:07






          • 1





            Should I try to track down the person who did this? How would you possibly do that? Unless you have video evidence, anyone who you think did it (handyman, angry neighbor, whatever...) will deny it.

            – manassehkatz
            Jan 14 at 6:13














          4












          4








          4







          "Sure" - "You can assume yes" - However this does NOT mean someone tampered with it.



          Someone has not secured the meter with a new identifying marker that gives a power company or service person indication that no one has touched it since it was last secured.



          This doesn't mean it was tampered with, it means as I've noted, someone did not re-secure it.






          share|improve this answer













          "Sure" - "You can assume yes" - However this does NOT mean someone tampered with it.



          Someone has not secured the meter with a new identifying marker that gives a power company or service person indication that no one has touched it since it was last secured.



          This doesn't mean it was tampered with, it means as I've noted, someone did not re-secure it.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Jan 14 at 2:48









          noybmannoybman

          1,264620




          1,264620













          • Is there a difference from electricity provider's point of view? Is there a fine if, for example, one of the construction workers we hired in the past have messed with it?

            – Hans Solo
            Jan 14 at 3:00













          • @HansSolo That's a question for your utility, as there is likely no universal response to that question.

            – mmathis
            Jan 14 at 3:04






          • 1





            It depends on where you live, and what (if anything) they want to do about it. Basically, safety & theft are the concerns. If there is evidence of either & the power compnay or some official chooses to make an issue, they will investigate. But more than likely, they will re-tag it when around next. If you know nothing was done that wasn't supposed to be, you shouldn't need to worry.

            – noybman
            Jan 14 at 3:05






          • 1





            ps.... you could always call them and ask them to tag it

            – noybman
            Jan 14 at 3:07






          • 1





            Should I try to track down the person who did this? How would you possibly do that? Unless you have video evidence, anyone who you think did it (handyman, angry neighbor, whatever...) will deny it.

            – manassehkatz
            Jan 14 at 6:13



















          • Is there a difference from electricity provider's point of view? Is there a fine if, for example, one of the construction workers we hired in the past have messed with it?

            – Hans Solo
            Jan 14 at 3:00













          • @HansSolo That's a question for your utility, as there is likely no universal response to that question.

            – mmathis
            Jan 14 at 3:04






          • 1





            It depends on where you live, and what (if anything) they want to do about it. Basically, safety & theft are the concerns. If there is evidence of either & the power compnay or some official chooses to make an issue, they will investigate. But more than likely, they will re-tag it when around next. If you know nothing was done that wasn't supposed to be, you shouldn't need to worry.

            – noybman
            Jan 14 at 3:05






          • 1





            ps.... you could always call them and ask them to tag it

            – noybman
            Jan 14 at 3:07






          • 1





            Should I try to track down the person who did this? How would you possibly do that? Unless you have video evidence, anyone who you think did it (handyman, angry neighbor, whatever...) will deny it.

            – manassehkatz
            Jan 14 at 6:13

















          Is there a difference from electricity provider's point of view? Is there a fine if, for example, one of the construction workers we hired in the past have messed with it?

          – Hans Solo
          Jan 14 at 3:00







          Is there a difference from electricity provider's point of view? Is there a fine if, for example, one of the construction workers we hired in the past have messed with it?

          – Hans Solo
          Jan 14 at 3:00















          @HansSolo That's a question for your utility, as there is likely no universal response to that question.

          – mmathis
          Jan 14 at 3:04





          @HansSolo That's a question for your utility, as there is likely no universal response to that question.

          – mmathis
          Jan 14 at 3:04




          1




          1





          It depends on where you live, and what (if anything) they want to do about it. Basically, safety & theft are the concerns. If there is evidence of either & the power compnay or some official chooses to make an issue, they will investigate. But more than likely, they will re-tag it when around next. If you know nothing was done that wasn't supposed to be, you shouldn't need to worry.

          – noybman
          Jan 14 at 3:05





          It depends on where you live, and what (if anything) they want to do about it. Basically, safety & theft are the concerns. If there is evidence of either & the power compnay or some official chooses to make an issue, they will investigate. But more than likely, they will re-tag it when around next. If you know nothing was done that wasn't supposed to be, you shouldn't need to worry.

          – noybman
          Jan 14 at 3:05




          1




          1





          ps.... you could always call them and ask them to tag it

          – noybman
          Jan 14 at 3:07





          ps.... you could always call them and ask them to tag it

          – noybman
          Jan 14 at 3:07




          1




          1





          Should I try to track down the person who did this? How would you possibly do that? Unless you have video evidence, anyone who you think did it (handyman, angry neighbor, whatever...) will deny it.

          – manassehkatz
          Jan 14 at 6:13





          Should I try to track down the person who did this? How would you possibly do that? Unless you have video evidence, anyone who you think did it (handyman, angry neighbor, whatever...) will deny it.

          – manassehkatz
          Jan 14 at 6:13


















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