The reason none of it matters is that Centerpoint won't lose a single customer, no matter how terrible they are at their one job.Ag13 said:Add to it that all the costs they incur to repair just get passed on to the customer. There's no accountability from even a profit margin standpoint. Which is why you see so many pictures of parking lots full of out of town workers (getting paid significant overtime I'm sure) waiting for hours on instructions for where to go. There's no need to be efficient. There's not even a need to provide updates.TXTransplant said:Cepe said:
The problem is, and why nothing will change with CenterPoint, is that people are like me.
I was pissed off and *****ing - but then my power came back on - I got back to life and haven't thought about CenterPoint since except reading this thread.
There won't be any follow-up because people just move on.
I tried. Things were so bad in my neighborhood last year, I spoke in front of The Woodlands Township board twice and there was an article in The Chronicle. There have been similar articles on other neighborhoods (a lot of them in Spring) with the same problem.
In addition to calling out the issues with our power supply, I called out the complete lack of communication, and another person quoted in the article raised the red flag about what was going to happen in a hurricane (since our outages were occurring in sunny weather).
I filed a complaint with the TPUC, and that was just sent right back to Centerpoint to address. I got a Landry list of excuses, and was even told that some of the multi-hour outages we had didn't even occur.
Their tracker and "outage updates" system hasn't been working since last June.
I don't think Centerpoint even has an accurate number of how many people are without power and where all of those outages are.
Bottom line is, they don't like the negative press, but they know there are no repercussions to continuing their MO. No fines, they ignore unhappy customers, and as others have said, once most people have power, we go about our daily lives and don't complain until another outage occurs.
They have zero real accountabliity, and for that reason, nothing will change.
And I'm in no way railing on the workers here. They deserve significant praise and compensation for being away from their homes to repair our city. Just wish Centerpoint could actually have an effective and efficient plan for how to utilize them.
Yeah! We went from "Scheduled" to "Assessment Complete". If my math is correct, and using the time delta between those two attributes, we should be "Partially Energized" in approximately 5.148 fartrons of time.Dill-Ag13 said:
Big update to the centerpoint map this morning
knives are coming out slowly for WhitmireQuote:
With this, they will not point fingers at the failure of their fellow democrats in a blue city.
They were coming out for him before this because he's actually shining light on Sly's failures and stating how bad of shape the city is in. They don't like that.cone said:knives are coming out slowly for WhitmireQuote:
With this, they will not point fingers at the failure of their fellow democrats in a blue city.
Centerpoint is 100% the bad guy in this story
Lina is bless her heart trying her best you can't blame her for trying and failing that would be mean
I certainly won't mind losing a bunch of people who don't know how to take care of themselves to Dallas or San Antonio.BBRex said:cone said:Anyone who knows my love for Houston knows how radical this idea is: I’m just not sure if I want to live here anymore.
— Alison Cook (@alisoncook) July 11, 2024
Three days without power
I'm sorry this is single ply soft
Houston is mostly a ****hole on its best days. I don't blame anyone for wanting to get out after three days without power.
You probably right.JCA1 said:
I'm hesitant to even say this out loud, but if we get another hurricane this year, it's going to be a Rita situation all over again, only this time the woodlands, conroe, etc. will try to evacuate too. Gonna be a disaster of epic proportions.
MAROON said:
Been there, done that. Will never leave again.
But will have all cars full of gas and leave as soon as its safe, and after the house is secure and all food thrown away from freezers.
If it's a cat 3 or higher headed right for us, I'm bolting far before it gets here. Way too many tall trees around the house to risk it.jopatura said:MAROON said:
Been there, done that. Will never leave again.
But will have all cars full of gas and leave as soon as its safe, and after the house is secure and all food thrown away from freezers.
That's really the key. Stay long enough to secure the property and make sure everything is safe, then leave. Most people could get around town by Tuesday morning. Have a monitoring system for power.
PJYoung said:
This was late Tuesday nightI have driven from Texas City through the entirety of Galveston Island, down through Surfside Beach and Freeport, back up into Sugar Land, across the greater Houston area, and now out to the George Bush airport region. I kid you not I have not seen a single power truck.
— Mark Sudduth (@hurricanetrack) July 10, 2024
I don’t…
Texaggie7nine said:If it's a cat 3 or higher headed right for us, I'm bolting far before it gets here. Way too many tall trees around the house to risk it.jopatura said:MAROON said:
Been there, done that. Will never leave again.
But will have all cars full of gas and leave as soon as its safe, and after the house is secure and all food thrown away from freezers.
That's really the key. Stay long enough to secure the property and make sure everything is safe, then leave. Most people could get around town by Tuesday morning. Have a monitoring system for power.
Dill-Ag13 said:K Bo said:Soapbox. I have been in the eyewall for 11 named storms now. 4 Majors. I have the right to say Beryl was one of the most intense I have seen. It's my opinion. It's my page. Tried to show what I saw the last couple days to help spread the word. I'm OK you might not agree. But if…
— Mike's Weather Page (@tropicalupdate) July 10, 2024
Would love to see data not just one dudes opinion. It wasn't no 120mph Ike
spoken like a veteran of Hurricane RitaMAROON said:
then a word of advice. leave at the absolute last minute. The roads will be clear except for the cars on the shoulder that all ran out of gas in the epic ****show traffic jam the days before.
ORALE!htxag09 said:
Well CenterPoint came to the house, walked into my neighbors backyard, then were gone.
Let myself get my hopes up for a few minutes….
htxag09 said:
Well CenterPoint came to the house, walked into my neighbors backyard, then were gone.
Let myself get my hopes up for a few minutes….
terradactylexpress said:
Most of those beryl tornadoes were not in the houston area I think
Texaggie7nine said:If it's a cat 3 or higher headed right for us, I'm bolting far before it gets here. Way too many tall trees around the house to risk it.jopatura said:MAROON said:
Been there, done that. Will never leave again.
But will have all cars full of gas and leave as soon as its safe, and after the house is secure and all food thrown away from freezers.
That's really the key. Stay long enough to secure the property and make sure everything is safe, then leave. Most people could get around town by Tuesday morning. Have a monitoring system for power.
Quote:
I certainly won't mind losing a bunch of people who don't know how to take care of themselves to Dallas or San Antonio.
I am gonna ride it out with Lieutenant DanJCA1 said:
I'm hesitant to even say this out loud, but if we get another hurricane this year, it's going to be a Rita situation all over again, only this time the woodlands, conroe, etc. will try to evacuate too. Gonna be a disaster of epic proportions.
htxag09 said:htxag09 said:
Well CenterPoint came to the house, walked into my neighbors backyard, then were gone.
Let myself get my hopes up for a few minutes….
And we're back on!
Pretty sure they just went house to house making sure lines weren't down then flipped a switch….
Hell, I left on Monday to an AC'ed hotel in CS. Doesn't mean I won't be right back there as soon as I have power. "taking care of yourself" means doing whatever you have to get by and not cry like a b%## about wanting to move away from Htown.BBRex said:Texaggie7nine said:If it's a cat 3 or higher headed right for us, I'm bolting far before it gets here. Way too many tall trees around the house to risk it.jopatura said:MAROON said:
Been there, done that. Will never leave again.
But will have all cars full of gas and leave as soon as its safe, and after the house is secure and all food thrown away from freezers.
That's really the key. Stay long enough to secure the property and make sure everything is safe, then leave. Most people could get around town by Tuesday morning. Have a monitoring system for power.
AndQuote:
I certainly won't mind losing a bunch of people who don't know how to take care of themselves to Dallas or San Antonio.
Anyway, as soon as I retire you can have my part of your mosquito-infested, hurricane-swept, shoddy-electric-grid swamp back. At the going market rates, of course.
On its own it would be soft. But since we've had at least 3 separate weather related multi-day power outages since 2021, its enough to make people question what the hell are we even doing here. I've lived in the Houston area for nearly 40 years and prior to the freeze the only major multi-day power outage event I can recall is Hurricane Ike. Losing power from a direct hit from a hurricane makes sense so this event in a bubble is frustrating but thats just life on the gulf. But having 3 events less than 4 years just blows ballscone said:Anyone who knows my love for Houston knows how radical this idea is: I’m just not sure if I want to live here anymore.
— Alison Cook (@alisoncook) July 11, 2024
Three days without power
I'm sorry this is single ply soft