Not a bad idea and my employer has offices there. Maybe I can request a transfer.
This right here. Very "gulf coast" of you.swimmerbabe11 said:Tex117 said:As always, the general rule (for non-costal communities) remains the same. Stay for a Cat 1 or Cat 2. More than likely get out of town for a Cat 3 (but can look at exact path), Cat 4 and Cat 5, get on out of dodge.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.
I was in Fort Worth getting my baby niece baptized on Sunday. My family could not understand why the Houston part of the family was hurricane tracking so we could make sure to get back in Houston in time for the storm. I'm glad we did though. I had a window break in my office that would have destroyed a very nice computer set up had I not heard the window shatter and gotten everything moved and the window covered (somewhat).
I haven't evacuated one yet. IMO, getting stuck on a highway in a storm is much scarier than sheltering in place with or with out power.
Stat Monitor Repairman said:
Seems like Centerpoint is taking a lot of heat over the sight of trucks assembled at a staging area.
This seems consistent with every hurricane response or logistics operation we've ever seen.
Machinery and personnel are staged. Work orders are issued and resources dispatched.
Problem we got here is people are so use to just in time inventory, same day Amazon Prime delivery, Uber eats dispatched to their doorstep at the click of a button to solve whatever problem they got.
People have been lulled into thinking the world moves that fast when it doesn't.
sts7049 said:
maybe that house 1/4 block over feels differently about the priorities.
cajunaggie08 said: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
If you are really bored you can drive and walk around plot the way the power lines run through your neighborhood. I discovered that I am an offshoot from the mainline into my neighborhood of 8 houses, On the other side of the split it goes to the rest of the neighborhood of something like 40 other houses. Then amongst that 40 are several other offshoots including those across the street. Then on the backside of our neighborhood the 40-50 houses get their power from a completely different direction. All that is to say there are going to be winners and there are going to be losers as far as when people get power turned back on.TXTransplant said:sts7049 said:
maybe that house 1/4 block over feels differently about the priorities.
What does that have to do with anything? I'm sure anyone who gets their power restored before someone else feels grateful/lucky
But my neighborhood has been through this too many times…we all feel terrible when one house or business gets power back and others that are sometimes as close is across the street have to wait hours or days longer. No one wishes that for their neighbor.
CDUB98 said:
Electrician wants $1500 to fix my weather head and reconnect the wires to the meter box. They can get it done today.
This sound reasonable in this environment?
FYI I paid $300 Tuesday - Had to replace the cover,clamp and the tie-down to the house and splice wires - there was no power on the lines to the house FYI.CDUB98 said:
Electrician wants $1500 to fix my weather head and reconnect the wires to the meter box. They can get it done today.
This sound reasonable in this environment?
Breggy Popup said:MelvinUdall said:Breggy Popup said:
State should mandate no trees within 100 yards of electrical infrastructure and give providers 1 year to clean it all up. Then heavy fines if an outage is caused by a tree falling. If a tree is on private property and the property owner refuses to let it be removed, the property owner receives a fine if the tree falls and causes damage.
I have seen so many poles, transformers and lines down this week from downed trees it is nuts. So easily preventable.
F*** freedom and private property rights…you must have been one of those people that was all for forcing everyone to get the Covid shot. What booster number are you on? GTFO.
Pure blood and about as anti-government as you can get.
That said, there are really two choices. Remove anything that the wind can blow over onto lines/poles or bury everything. Well, there is a third choice. Accept that any major weather event will most likely cause severe disruption.
I expected some debate on my spitball idea post last night while finally enjoying a few cold beers in the AC of my truck. I didn't expect so much direct hate lol.
Ag_07 said:Stat Monitor Repairman said:
Seems like Centerpoint is taking a lot of heat over the sight of trucks assembled at a staging area.
This seems consistent with every hurricane response or logistics operation we've ever seen.
Machinery and personnel are staged. Work orders are issued and resources dispatched.
Problem we got here is people are so use to just in time inventory, same day Amazon Prime delivery, Uber eats dispatched to their doorstep at the click of a button to solve whatever problem they got.
People have been lulled into thinking the world moves that fast when it doesn't.
This is my whole issue.
Honestly...Is 3-5 days really that outrageous after a hurricane blows through the 3rd largest metro area in the country?
Ag_07 said:Stat Monitor Repairman said:
Seems like Centerpoint is taking a lot of heat over the sight of trucks assembled at a staging area.
This seems consistent with every hurricane response or logistics operation we've ever seen.
Machinery and personnel are staged. Work orders are issued and resources dispatched.
Problem we got here is people are so use to just in time inventory, same day Amazon Prime delivery, Uber eats dispatched to their doorstep at the click of a button to solve whatever problem they got.
People have been lulled into thinking the world moves that fast when it doesn't.
This is my whole issue.
Honestly...Is 3-5 days really that outrageous after a hurricane blows through the 3rd largest metro area in the country?
justnobody79 said:If you are really bored you can drive and walk around plot the way the power lines run through your neighborhood. I discovered that I am an offshoot from the mainline into my neighborhood of 8 houses, On the other side of the split it goes to the rest of the neighborhood of something like 40 other houses. Then amongst that 40 are several other offshoots including those across the street. Then on the backside of our neighborhood the 40-50 houses get their power from a completely different direction. All that is to say there are going to be winners and there are going to be losers as far as when people get power turned back on.TXTransplant said:sts7049 said:
maybe that house 1/4 block over feels differently about the priorities.
What does that have to do with anything? I'm sure anyone who gets their power restored before someone else feels grateful/lucky
But my neighborhood has been through this too many times…we all feel terrible when one house or business gets power back and others that are sometimes as close is across the street have to wait hours or days longer. No one wishes that for their neighbor.
Furlock Bones said:
This is why I say that everything is getting worse. "Well it will be massively expensive to fix everything and no one is going to pay for that." This is the attitude that leads to doing nothing that makes the situation continually get worse.
Caliber said:
I agree Centerpoint has issues for sure, but more people need to look at the expected results from a Cat 1 hurricane based on the Saffir-Simpson Scale.
This was a direct hit of an intensifying hurricane on a major city. We received extensive damage to power lines and poles...
I'd argue that a big part of the issue is too much information for most people. During IKE you didn't have this kind of info coming at you. More information does not solve the problem most of the time because it just gives people more things to attack. People sitting on forums seeing others get their power back is just pissing them off further.
Unless someone here is an idiot, we all want that, but how much are YOU willing to pay for all of that per Kwh?Quote:
I want innovation, improvements, and preventative measures so these experiences don't happen every time a large thunderstorm rolls through. I want Houston to handle a Cat 1 with a little more ease than it just did.
$1500 to $1250, came down $250Sazerac said:
$1500 to $250?
I'd be pissed he tried to screw you first
He got it for $1,250Sazerac said:
$1500 to $250?
I'd be pissed he tried to screw you first
No, down $250 to $1250.Sazerac said:
$1500 to $250?
I'd be pissed he tried to screw you first
BudFox7 said:Furlock Bones said:
This is why I say that everything is getting worse. "Well it will be massively expensive to fix everything and no one is going to pay for that." This is the attitude that leads to doing nothing that makes the situation continually get worse.
What's the solution? Govt creates a tax (that will never go away) and creates new laws or regs that require CenterPoint to do something, and pays them our tax money to do it?