Y'all can flag me or whatever, I just think that sometimes context is important to the situation and can help people rationalize what is going on.
This may sound like I am making excuses for the Centerpoint and others. I certainly am not. This is just the reality of what many of you are going through. Sometimes understanding the problem helps you deal with the problem.
Feel free to ask me any questions and I will answer to the best of my ability. 22 years of being on the leadership side of these things has stuffed my brain full of useless information.
- Communication is very important during an event like this, but utilities always under promise and over deliver where possible. My utility would purposely shut down their outage web site when outages crossed a specific threshold. Standard operating procedure. *** Corporate Communications people have no idea how the business functions, so anything they say is canned and will not commit the utility to anything***
- What you are hearing about damage assessment first is common and part of the recovery plan for all utilities. Unfortunately, to keep bills low, even in 2024 utilities are not as technologically sophisticated as you think they are. The bulk of the damage assessment is done by a human in a truck.
- Public health and safety will always be priorities. Live on the same circuit as a hospital or water pumping station, you hit the lottery.
- Out of town crews are not familiar with your system. They are experts at theirs, but even the differences in distribution Voltages can slow things down. They are usually assigned to grunt work like replacing poles or cutting things in the clear. This frees up the experts to do the technical work required for restoration.
- Out of town crews are usually staged outside of the threat area. The providing utility is not going to place their crews or equipment in danger. The erratic nature of where this thing was going to landfall probably led utilities to keep their crews at home until they were sure where it was going to hit. Imagine being CPS Energy and sending your crews to Corpus to stage when it looked like it was going there and then have to mobilize to Houston.
- Utilities always prioritize getting the largest number of customers back online first. This means that they start at the substation and work their way out from there. The single outages are always the last to be restored.
- Most all utilities cannot afford to have the amount of material required for this type of restoration on hand. Again rates. Imagine the number of poles, transformers, miles of wire, cross arms, nuts, bolts, etc that it takes to do a restoration like this.
This may sound like I am making excuses for the Centerpoint and others. I certainly am not. This is just the reality of what many of you are going through. Sometimes understanding the problem helps you deal with the problem.
Feel free to ask me any questions and I will answer to the best of my ability. 22 years of being on the leadership side of these things has stuffed my brain full of useless information.