Notarealsignguy
Arial - it's almost helvetica
No, we all know that you wear loafersSomeone is about to make a joke about me... I can just feel it
No, we all know that you wear loafersSomeone is about to make a joke about me... I can just feel it
Texas_Signmaker said:Come on man... 100 days of 100 is what we are all about... I mean, we do have a biker rally called "hotter than hell" in the middle of the summer.
Texas_Signmaker said:no, I'm not an idiot who signed up for those stupid plans...I'm in a 3 year contract. And our cooking and heat is gas so we use almost no electricity in the winter.
Yeah, for anyone reading the thread not familiar with events in this region, the Hotter'N Hell Hundred is the largest single-day 100 mile endurance bicycle race in the United States. It's held in Wichita Falls every year in late August. There are some shorter distance races and more recreational-style rides at the event that weekend. We have an annual bike race up here called the Tour of the Wichitas, but it's not as hardcore as the Hotter'N Hell 100 (but it is more scenic).
I think we've already had 2 or 3 blast furnace style Summers within the last decade, including one that beat out the awful Summers of 1980 and 1998. But the last couple or so Summers have been relatively mild. We might be in for it this Summer. I'm just praying we don't have a bunch of hail and tornadoes between now and Memorial Day weekend. Usually things go bone dry here after Memorial Day. I don't mind wind damage so much; we tend to get some sign business from that!
I don't know all the details about how electrical plans are sold to consumers in Texas, but from what I understand there are shady practices and not all the gory details are made plain and clear up front. Truth in advertising kind of goes out the window when those pesky regulations are removed. Some of the companies selling power are Johnny-come-lately arrivals to the market. Griddy, one of the biggest offenders in this price gouging mess, is a 3-year old start-up based in California.
I'm not on any kind of contract or averaged plan for my gas or electric service here in Oklahoma. Nevertheless I don't see my utility bills going through any huge price swings. The bills stay in a pretty dependable range. That's due in part to the regulations in place.
Caveat emptor. If people want to hold companies responsible then maybe they should use that thing between their ears a little bit more too.All the information about the electric plans is right there...all you need to do is learn how to read. If people gloss over it and don't read then they will just rip themselves off. There are all kind of weird plans... like free nights and weekends but the rape you during the peak hours... or a flat rate up 1000 kwh and then rape after that. Just pick a regular plan and you're fine.
Texas_Signmaker said:All the information about the electric plans is right there...all you need to do is learn how to read.
I don't typically stick up for companies but the companies were charged crazy rates, they are just resellers, not producers. Why is it on them to eat the excessive cost that they incurred and the people agreed to pay for? The consumers were being cheap, they signed a risky contract that was clear to anyone with half a brain cell that it could go both ways. When they were paying much less, did the consumers send in extra payments since their bills were less than their neighbors? Life is a 2 way street. This wasn't a matter of them being unscrupulous at all and honestly, they did the right thing by sending out warnings. This reminds me of the interest only loans that bit people. Everyone cried foul over their stupid decision and at the end of it all, the consumers and banks both ate it. Just like what is gonna happen now. People need to wisen up.Some of it might boil down to buyer beware. But It doesn't sound like all the information was plainly there for all to easily see. Where in the verbiage does Griddy warn consumers they could end up paying $6000-$17000 for one week of electrical service (and have their bank account instantly emptied)?
What makes this look especially bad for those utility companies is that they're charging wind-fall, price-gouging rates all while they did next to nothing to prepare for this kind of disaster. 10 years ago there was a major blackout in Texas during Super Bowl week. There were plenty of hearings and warnings after those hearings that Texas' power grid needed to be upgraded and winterized to be ready for another one of these weather events. The utilities blew off those recommendations and didn't do a d***ed thing.
The situation is bad enough that lawmakers from both sides of the aisle are raising hell about it. But just like those "stupid" consumers, those politicians should have known better. 20 years ago certain politicians were trying to push Oklahoma into adopting a "free market" utilities system like Texas and the voters shot it down.
This is what they call pandering. The same ones raising holy hell are the same ones that pushed the deregulation. I think they coined this flip flopping?The situation is bad enough that lawmakers from both sides of the aisle are raising hell about it.
Have you tried cornstarch to get rid of that 'feeling'?Someone is about to make a joke about me... I can just feel it
Notarealsignguy said:I don't typically stick up for companies but the companies were charged crazy rates, they are just resellers, not producers. Why is it on them to eat the excessive cost that they incurred and the people agreed to pay for?
Notarealsignguy said:The consumers were being cheap, they signed a risky contract that was clear to anyone with half a brain cell that it could go both ways.
Texas_Signmaker said:The reason we didn't wise up 10 years ago is because in two days the temps are in the 80s and we're running A/C... who's thinking about cold when they are sweating in heat?
Texas_Signmaker said:The free market has opened the door to bad plans that idiots choose... that's their own fault... free market and they are free to be idiots... but it DOES benefit most people if you have half a brain and just get normal service...
Texas_Signmaker said:For 10 years I lived in a part of Texas that was not on the Texas grid... and was regulated. You only had one power company to choose from. Every year SWEPCO would go to state regulators and ask for rate increases and they would get it... and if it took a year for the approval...they back billed you the price increase for that year!
Do you carefully read line by line the EULA for every piece of computer software you buy and install? For any tangible retail product you buy do you always carefully read the little piece of paper with legal-ese published in microscopic sized type? Very few people do. They click past those EULAs and throw the little product disclaimers in the trash with the rest of the packaging.
Again, truth in advertising is a very slippery thing in the US today, especially with anything that is seriously de-regulated.
[/I]
Texas_Signmaker said:The disclosures on the power plans is in plain English and is right there in your face as you sign up.
If you've never signed up for a plan in Texas how can you know and comment on OUR system??
Griddy sent out warnings to their customers that advised them of what was coming and even told them it would be in their best interest for them to switch providers. Not real sure how much more you can do short of cutting off their power to save them from their own stupidity. Then the people would complain about that. They say that cheap is expensive for a reason.Plain English. Right. Show me where they specifically and clearly warn a variable rate plan can nail a customer with a $5000-$15000 bill for one month or even one week worth of electricity. I strongly doubt it's a bullet point any of those companies want to openly advertise.
Texas_Signmaker said:That's like saying they should ban all free market sign shops because somewhere someone ripped someone off and did shoddy work.
Texas_Signmaker said:Like I said, you don't live here so it's hard for outsiders to comment.
From this side of the Red River it is pretty easy to see the electric utility situation in Texas has turned into a 100% $#!+ show. If the arrangement was 100% acceptable we would not have seen five board members from ERCOT resign. The controversy has a long way to go before playing itself out.
When it came to light that many on the board don't live in Texas, that didn't go over well down here. Outsiders trying to make decisions about our power doesn't sound good. The governor said that he was going to make it a requirement that if you are on the board or ERCOT that you need to live in the state. Those that resigned were out of state members... and their resignation was well received here.
Like I said, the only ones that can criticize our system is ourselves. We'll figure it out and don't need outside help... that's the reason we have our own system is to avoid federal oversight and keep control local.