sts7049 said:
David_Puddy said:
Ag_07 said:
We got lucky this time around and never lost power but that's not been the case in the past.
It really is an awful experience and I feel for anyone who's down especially with the heat we're getting the next couple days..
However, I will say I think the hand wringing over the outage tracker and 'communication' from CP is a bit much. Critiquing the preparedness is acceptable but I've never got the big stink about the tracker map.
I can imagine the logistics of managing thousands of linemen from all over to assist in restoring millions of customers is extremely challenging.
I also imagine in mass outage events like this the tracker map is incredibly hard to keep updated and becomes absolutely pointless. IDGAF about a map. Just get power back on ASAP.
Certainly a more reasonable post that the other dipsh-t, but again tracker map aside, the communication is pretty terrible. An outage map at least gives some sort of estimate or expectation versus just being completely in the dark. Especially if you have elderly family members you need to plan for. The heat index is about to get north of 100 and that is life threatening for an elderly person without electricity. Not really sure what is so hard to understand about that.
As noted by a poster above, Florida is far more prepared than we are and has no issue restoring power to 1m+ within a day.
if you have elderly parents to deal with, you should have already had a plan in place for what you were going to do during a hurricane. with consideration for the potential for extended power outages, which should be a surprise to nobody on the gulf coast.
if you didn't do that ahead of time, that's not centerpoint's problem. obviously them having their ****e together would have made it easier, but that's not the real issue here
Mine live in the hill country, but you're missing the point. I mean we're all pretty much in the dark in getting power back via their communication with the local news and their sh-tty outage tracker. As has been pointed out by another poster there is always so much "in retrospect" from Centerpoint instead of becoming more efficient. In regards to my example, there are certain people who can't afford to transport family members elsewhere. I mean hell there aren't many hotels all the way to College Station, sometimes it's not really that easy to just "make alternate plans." Especially when up until Sunday the meteorologists didn't have this thing headed our way.
It's a storm out of people's control, but Jesus Christ when we've had enough of these over the years, you'd think their communication process would be more efficient and it seems like it's even less efficient now. How does that make sense? The outage map worked perfectly fine during the freeze in '21.