I'm not insulted. Have a good one.
No, he really didn't.Furlock Bones said:CDUB98 said:Care to explain why, or just drive by?Furlock Bones said:
Good lord this is so far off the mark it hurts.
I think Wycliffe summed it up pretty well.
schmellba99 said:No, he really didn't.Furlock Bones said:CDUB98 said:Care to explain why, or just drive by?Furlock Bones said:
Good lord this is so far off the mark it hurts.
I think Wycliffe summed it up pretty well.
CDUB actually did.
On top of what CDUB listed out, you also have to factor in the absolute beating it is to deal with various entities (state, county, municipal, local, fedral, etc., etc., etc.) in a lot of areas in order to acutally do any tree trimming, electrical ROW or not.
The bottom line is that the biggest driver is cost, even with a company that is a PUC. They answer to ERCOT, ERCOT answers to elected officials, elected officials aren't tossing their sack on the table and saying "sure, go ahead and spend what you need to spend to trim all the trees back and bury lines and what not, then jack electrical rates up 4x."
Because there isn't a single person on here that would just shrug their shoulders when the next electrical contract comes out and all of a sudden instead of $.15kw/hr pricing it is $1.00kw/hr pricing and your $300 electrical bill in June is now $1400. You'd wail and gnash teeth and everything else, and the politicians know it.
A lot of various factors at play, but ultimately it comes down to cost and the fact that nobody wants costs to go up any.
This was the key. A government entity that has enough political power entered the chat.Quote:
The Woodlands Township got involved
CDUB98 said:This was the key. A government entity that has enough political power entered the chat.Quote:
The Woodlands Township got involved
NoahAg said:
Also, it's hard for me to empathize with people who live in Houston and still refuse to plan ahead. And I'm not even a native. Ike, Harvey, 2021 freeze, annual flooding of certain parts of town. Clif's notes for any newcomers or longtime residents who haven't figured it out:
-Houston gets storms, hurricanes and flooding in some areas.
-It can also get cold here.
-When seconds count the police are minutes away.
-If you live in an area that has flooded it will flood again.
-Buy a generator and know how to use it.
-Keep a stock of water and non-perishable food. HEB might not be open during a disaster.
-Stop waiting for someone else to do something.
-Hol' it dine.
I remember one year the city or some entity cut down some trees along Kirby, and local media jumped on the outrage in West U and Nottingham. And that was in the public right of way.ccolley68 said:
I'm not defending CenterPoint, but just to play devils advocate a second, one of the few aesthetic redeeming qualities of Houston are the big trees. Most of the area hardest hit by this event were the Memorial, Bunker Hill, Piney Point, Spring Branch areas. Areas with big beautiful trees, and big beautiful homes owned by some of the wealthiest people in town. Let's pretend this storm hadn't happened recently, and this week CenterPoint proactively sent crews into these areas to remove those big trees in this area to protect the power lines as some have suggested? There would be Range Rivers and Escalades and Botox lined up almost to where the poors live to protest their trees being removed.
Quote:
Alright, since you just inferred that people like me who are complaining are communists.
This is dead on. Roughly .04/KW of your electric usage goes to CP. That rate is set by the PUC. Centerpoint gets to have a monopoly but they have a fixed rate of return. Theoretically they have to show all their costs to the PUC and they PUC tells them what they can charge. If they skimp and save money, it doesn't go to shareholders, it goes to us in lower rates. Same if costs go up. I still don't have power and kids aren't in school. It's much easier to cope with my generator, but I get how difficult this week is on many. All that to say, if want more it's going to cost more. Preventing something like this would be much much much more.schmellba99 said:No, he really didn't.Furlock Bones said:CDUB98 said:Care to explain why, or just drive by?Furlock Bones said:
Good lord this is so far off the mark it hurts.
I think Wycliffe summed it up pretty well.
CDUB actually did.
On top of what CDUB listed out, you also have to factor in the absolute beating it is to deal with various entities (state, county, municipal, local, fedral, etc., etc., etc.) in a lot of areas in order to acutally do any tree trimming, electrical ROW or not.
The bottom line is that the biggest driver is cost, even with a company that is a PUC. They answer to ERCOT, ERCOT answers to elected officials, elected officials aren't tossing their sack on the table and saying "sure, go ahead and spend what you need to spend to trim all the trees back and bury lines and what not, then jack electrical rates up 4x."
Because there isn't a single person on here that would just shrug their shoulders when the next electrical contract comes out and all of a sudden instead of $.15kw/hr pricing it is $1.00kw/hr pricing and your $300 electrical bill in June is now $1400. You'd wail and gnash teeth and everything else, and the politicians know it.
A lot of various factors at play, but ultimately it comes down to cost and the fact that nobody wants costs to go up any.
Would Houston have any trees left if this were the policy?Cromagnum said:
Personally I think all trees within 50 feet of a power line should be cut down. It's dumb to set ourselves up for failure by leaving then in place.
Even then, sometimes that doesn't have nearly the clout you would think it does.CDUB98 said:This was the key. A government entity that has enough political power entered the chat.Quote:
The Woodlands Township got involved
And yet it did, and not just in Texas. It f'd up a lot of things along almost the entire Gulf coast.AgLiving06 said:
Welcome to the CenterPoint hate train! Glad to see we have some new joiners!
CenterPoint is a disaster of a company and there's no way a for-profit company should have a monopoly over our utilities without strict requirements on capex expectations.
Remember, the backup for power outages are also controlled by them...and hey...you can buy into their nat gas insurance scam if you want as well...They sure do seem to have a lot of money to send monthly fliers out promoting that...Definitely not a money maker for them though
The reality is this...20-30 mins of cat 2 hurricane winds should not have done this level of damage. We live in a hurricane prone area. This should not have happened. We know this. CenterPoint knows this...but what they also know is that if they can pocket money for years of not doing upgrades, and then pay some extra for line workers during a time like this, it's still cheaper (probably get insurance coverage as well).
We are going to get rocked one of the years by something stronger and it's going to be a real major issue. This should be a wakeup call that we need to hold them accountable before it's too late.
You are going to have to explain this to me. Because I was pretty clear in what I stated, and several others seemed to understand it and agree with it.Furlock Bones said:
Nothing like massive hyperbole to not prove your point.
CowtownAg06 said:This is dead on. Roughly .04/KW of your electric usage goes to CP. That rate is set by the PUC. Centerpoint gets to have a monopoly but they have a fixed rate of return. Theoretically they have to show all their costs to the PUC and they PUC tells them what they can charge. If they skimp and save money, it doesn't go to shareholders, it goes to us in lower rates. Same if costs go up. I still don't have power and kids aren't in school. It's much easier to cope with my generator, but I get how difficult this week is on many. All that to say, if want more it's going to cost more. Preventing something like this would be much much much more.schmellba99 said:No, he really didn't.Furlock Bones said:CDUB98 said:Care to explain why, or just drive by?Furlock Bones said:
Good lord this is so far off the mark it hurts.
I think Wycliffe summed it up pretty well.
CDUB actually did.
On top of what CDUB listed out, you also have to factor in the absolute beating it is to deal with various entities (state, county, municipal, local, fedral, etc., etc., etc.) in a lot of areas in order to acutally do any tree trimming, electrical ROW or not.
The bottom line is that the biggest driver is cost, even with a company that is a PUC. They answer to ERCOT, ERCOT answers to elected officials, elected officials aren't tossing their sack on the table and saying "sure, go ahead and spend what you need to spend to trim all the trees back and bury lines and what not, then jack electrical rates up 4x."
Because there isn't a single person on here that would just shrug their shoulders when the next electrical contract comes out and all of a sudden instead of $.15kw/hr pricing it is $1.00kw/hr pricing and your $300 electrical bill in June is now $1400. You'd wail and gnash teeth and everything else, and the politicians know it.
A lot of various factors at play, but ultimately it comes down to cost and the fact that nobody wants costs to go up any.
.04 is the transmission charge that goes to Centerpoint. The remaining .06-.12 is for the actual energy you consume. Look at states with dereg vs lose without. It's cheaper here and we've kept up with demand better than other places.TXTransplant said:CowtownAg06 said:This is dead on. Roughly .04/KW of your electric usage goes to CP. That rate is set by the PUC. Centerpoint gets to have a monopoly but they have a fixed rate of return. Theoretically they have to show all their costs to the PUC and they PUC tells them what they can charge. If they skimp and save money, it doesn't go to shareholders, it goes to us in lower rates. Same if costs go up. I still don't have power and kids aren't in school. It's much easier to cope with my generator, but I get how difficult this week is on many. All that to say, if want more it's going to cost more. Preventing something like this would be much much much more.schmellba99 said:No, he really didn't.Furlock Bones said:CDUB98 said:Care to explain why, or just drive by?Furlock Bones said:
Good lord this is so far off the mark it hurts.
I think Wycliffe summed it up pretty well.
CDUB actually did.
On top of what CDUB listed out, you also have to factor in the absolute beating it is to deal with various entities (state, county, municipal, local, fedral, etc., etc., etc.) in a lot of areas in order to acutally do any tree trimming, electrical ROW or not.
The bottom line is that the biggest driver is cost, even with a company that is a PUC. They answer to ERCOT, ERCOT answers to elected officials, elected officials aren't tossing their sack on the table and saying "sure, go ahead and spend what you need to spend to trim all the trees back and bury lines and what not, then jack electrical rates up 4x."
Because there isn't a single person on here that would just shrug their shoulders when the next electrical contract comes out and all of a sudden instead of $.15kw/hr pricing it is $1.00kw/hr pricing and your $300 electrical bill in June is now $1400. You'd wail and gnash teeth and everything else, and the politicians know it.
A lot of various factors at play, but ultimately it comes down to cost and the fact that nobody wants costs to go up any.
$0.04/kWh, yet most of us are probably paying 2-4X that rate. All because we have "deregulation" and there are dozens (if not hundreds) of fly by night electricity "providers" that do nothing more than send you a bill every month (and sit outside the doors of HEB to annoy you when you're trying to grocery shop).
There is a solution. Cut out these middle men who literally do nothing more than bill customers and pay Centerpoint that rate directly. Centerpoint can use what we currently pay for the illusion of "deregulation" to improve maintenance and reliability.
schmellba99 said:And yet it did, and not just in Texas. It f'd up a lot of things along almost the entire Gulf coast.AgLiving06 said:
Welcome to the CenterPoint hate train! Glad to see we have some new joiners!
CenterPoint is a disaster of a company and there's no way a for-profit company should have a monopoly over our utilities without strict requirements on capex expectations.
Remember, the backup for power outages are also controlled by them...and hey...you can buy into their nat gas insurance scam if you want as well...They sure do seem to have a lot of money to send monthly fliers out promoting that...Definitely not a money maker for them though
The reality is this...20-30 mins of cat 2 hurricane winds should not have done this level of damage. We live in a hurricane prone area. This should not have happened. We know this. CenterPoint knows this...but what they also know is that if they can pocket money for years of not doing upgrades, and then pay some extra for line workers during a time like this, it's still cheaper (probably get insurance coverage as well).
We are going to get rocked one of the years by something stronger and it's going to be a real major issue. This should be a wakeup call that we need to hold them accountable before it's too late.
So that tells me that either every single place has a power company that is completely useless, or that the idea that 100+ mph winds that hit in a matter of a couple of minutes and that spout tornadoes aren't exactly the same as a hurricane wind that takes time to ramp up to speed.
Kind of the difference in 500 flt lbs of force being applied to your chest. A gradual increase in the force is something you can sustain and adjust to. Might be uncomfortable, but tolerable. Mike Tyson coming in and throwing a right hook out of nowhere to your ribcage is going to break ribs and plant you on your ass. Same force, different application.
Quote:
So that tells me that either every single place has a power company that is completely useless, or that the idea that 100+ mph winds that hit in a matter of a couple of minutes and that spout tornadoes aren't exactly the same as a hurricane wind that takes time to ramp up to speed.
Kind of the difference in 500 flt lbs of force being applied to your chest. A gradual increase in the force is something you can sustain and adjust to. Might be uncomfortable, but tolerable. Mike Tyson coming in and throwing a right hook out of nowhere to your ribcage is going to break ribs and plant you on your ass. Same force, different application.
CenterPoint's rate is regulated. The cost difference between "providers" is just their charge. CenterPoint gets the same amount no matter who sends the bill. The state regulates CenterPoint still.Quote:
The purpose of deregulation is to drive competition, but Centerpoint HAS NO competition.
Somehow a lot of those middlemen providers can get better rates than directly from Centerpoint though.TXTransplant said:
The "providers" have to be making money, otherwise there wouldn't be so many of them. Regardless of how much it is, I'd l rather pay that directly to Centerpoint.
Deregulation of electricity here is a scam. The purpose of deregulation is to drive competition, but Centerpoint HAS NO competition. Think, Reliant, Octopus, Frontier, Green Mountain, Amigo, etc., are NOT competition when ALL of the electrons come from Centerpoint.
Not to mention (as someone already said), Centerpoint controls our natural gas utilities, too.
Anyone with half a brain knows Centerpoint has a monopoly. And I'm fine with that. It's just stupid to pay anything to these "providers" who provide absolutely nothing.
Fully agree, but evidently we're wrong it's really just greedy companies.Chewy said:
To be fair, customer service as a whole sucks in every industry because there's so many layers of bureaucracy and BS so customer service is just following prepared script and not allowed to actually think and apply common sense.
And a lot of them go out of business.schmellba99 said:Somehow a lot of those middlemen providers can get better rates than directly from Centerpoint though.TXTransplant said:
The "providers" have to be making money, otherwise there wouldn't be so many of them. Regardless of how much it is, I'd l rather pay that directly to Centerpoint.
Deregulation of electricity here is a scam. The purpose of deregulation is to drive competition, but Centerpoint HAS NO competition. Think, Reliant, Octopus, Frontier, Green Mountain, Amigo, etc., are NOT competition when ALL of the electrons come from Centerpoint.
Not to mention (as someone already said), Centerpoint controls our natural gas utilities, too.
Anyone with half a brain knows Centerpoint has a monopoly. And I'm fine with that. It's just stupid to pay anything to these "providers" who provide absolutely nothing.
schmellba99 said:Somehow a lot of those middlemen providers can get better rates than directly from Centerpoint though.TXTransplant said:
The "providers" have to be making money, otherwise there wouldn't be so many of them. Regardless of how much it is, I'd l rather pay that directly to Centerpoint.
Deregulation of electricity here is a scam. The purpose of deregulation is to drive competition, but Centerpoint HAS NO competition. Think, Reliant, Octopus, Frontier, Green Mountain, Amigo, etc., are NOT competition when ALL of the electrons come from Centerpoint.
Not to mention (as someone already said), Centerpoint controls our natural gas utilities, too.
Anyone with half a brain knows Centerpoint has a monopoly. And I'm fine with that. It's just stupid to pay anything to these "providers" who provide absolutely nothing.
cajunaggie08 said:And a lot of them go out of business.schmellba99 said:Somehow a lot of those middlemen providers can get better rates than directly from Centerpoint though.TXTransplant said:
The "providers" have to be making money, otherwise there wouldn't be so many of them. Regardless of how much it is, I'd l rather pay that directly to Centerpoint.
Deregulation of electricity here is a scam. The purpose of deregulation is to drive competition, but Centerpoint HAS NO competition. Think, Reliant, Octopus, Frontier, Green Mountain, Amigo, etc., are NOT competition when ALL of the electrons come from Centerpoint.
Not to mention (as someone already said), Centerpoint controls our natural gas utilities, too.
Anyone with half a brain knows Centerpoint has a monopoly. And I'm fine with that. It's just stupid to pay anything to these "providers" who provide absolutely nothing.
Also Centerpoint doesnt sell electricity. They just own the lines. The middlemen are the ones buying electricity from the power generators around the state.