Those big bills are in Houston and Dallas etc. where they have competing companies that have variable "wholesale" rate suppliers. A bill would have a charge for power and a separate charge for distribution.
Anyone seeing an enormous CPS bill? Mine looks to be about average. Maybe it won't show up until my next meter read. Who knows.
Those big bills are in Houston and Dallas etc. where they have competing companies that have variable "wholesale" rate suppliers. A bill would have a charge for power and a separate charge for distribution.
Thanks. I'm on auto-pay and didn't feel like changing it.
They agreed to pay wholesale spot prices.
CPS customers will be paying higher charges too because they have a "fuel adjustment charge" built into their bills but they are planning to spread the charge out over ten years.
CPS is beholden to their private buddies. They have a very hard time giving reliable info out based on the fact that there private overlords can do anything they want. Expect them to be very careful. CPS has to play by rules that ERCot dances merrily around.
No, it was the wind turbines, fckn green stuff...
Being prepared for extreme conditions is expensive.
Arkansas can afford it.
(shrugs)
U.S. Average Snow State Rank
A total of 51 results found. Show Results on Map.
Rank Average Snow ▼ State / Population
1. 89.25 inches Vermont / 626,358
2. 77.28 inches Maine / 1,328,535
3. 71.44 inches New Hampshire / 1,321,069
4. 67.30 inches Colorado / 5,197,580
5. 64.46 inches Alaska / 728,300
6. 60.66 inches Michigan / 9,889,024
7. 55.32 inches New York / 19,594,330
8. 51.05 inches Massachusetts / 6,657,291
9. 51.00 inches Wyoming / 575,251
10. 45.79 inches Wisconsin / 5,724,692
11. 43.43 inches Minnesota / 5,383,661
12. 40.99 inches Utah / 2,858,111
13. 38.85 inches Rhode Island / 1,053,252
14. 37.85 inches Connecticut / 3,592,053
15. 37.43 inches South Dakota / 834,708
16. 37.28 inches Montana / 1,006,370
17. 37.00 inches North Dakota / 704,925
18. 36.49 inches Idaho / 1,599,464
19. 35.84 inches Pennsylvania / 12,758,729
20. 31.27 inches Iowa / 3,078,116
21. 28.12 inches Nebraska / 1,855,617
22. 26.63 inches Ohio / 11,560,380
23. 25.13 inches West Virginia / 1,853,881
24. 23.73 inches New Jersey / 8,874,374
25. 22.74 inches New Mexico / 2,080,085
26. 21.93 inches Indiana / 6,542,411
27. 21.75 inches Illinois / 12,868,747
28. 20.61 inches Maryland / 5,887,776
29. 18.83 inches Nevada / 2,761,584
30. 17.61 inches District of Columbia / 633,736
31. 16.94 inches Delaware / 917,060
32. 15.57 inches Washington / 6,899,123
33. 15.42 inches Kansas / 2,882,946
34. 14.85 inches Virginia / 8,185,131
35. 12.67 inches Missouri / 6,028,076
36. 10.91 inches Oregon / 3,900,343
37. 8.83 inches Kentucky / 4,383,272
38. 5.88 inches Oklahoma / 3,818,851
39. 5.03 inches North Carolina / 9,750,405
40. 4.76 inches Arizona / 6,561,516
41. 4.61 inches Tennessee / 6,451,365
42. 4.04 inches Arkansas / 2,947,036
43. 3.76 inches California / 38,066,920
44. 1.50 inches South Carolina / 4,727,273
45. 1.36 inches Texas / 26,092,033
46. 0.76 inches Georgia / 9,907,756
47. 0.71 inches Mississippi / 2,984,345
48. 0.57 inches Alabama / 4,817,678
49. 0.20 inches Louisiana / 4,601,049
50. 0.01 inches Florida / 19,361,792
51. 0.00 inches Hawaii / 1,392,704
How do you explain the difference between Texarkana, Tx and Texarkana, Ark?
This is happening every ten years now. Time to fix it no matter how much DMC whines and keeps replying.
What's happening every 10 years now?
While it appears that Arkansas has done a better job of clearing roads than Texas, it’s important to note that the above-displayed video and photograph capture one moment in time. Texarkana Gazette reported that while this viral picture truly does show a half-cleared, half-covered road, both sides of this road were plowed shortly after this picture was taken.
Let's not let facts get in the way of a good story though.
Are you just playing stupid now?
Or are you stupid?
Suddenly ST Trump supporters demand weatherization austerity.
If Texas purchases a lot of snow equipment now, 10 years from now it will be basically obsolete. We should wait for 9 years, then buy it.
Cool.
I'll be fine with getting on the interstate grids and winterizing power generation in the state.
It's time.
Don't let that deter you in your quest to "gotheem" though. You'll eventually stumble upon something if you keep posting enough random .
How's that water delivery going? Cruz has already delivered more water than you.
Anyone who posts as much or as hastily as you and I do is going to make mistakes. I didn't vet the tweet, but that hardly undermines the need for more investment in winterization in Texas.
Sorry about the bad tweet.
Yoi're just making stuff up now. I more meant the grid than snowplows.
Fantastic read
https://apple.news/AHM2qt1BQThmI3CIgPG9Taw
Rolling blackouts when it gets a little cold. Had rolling blackouts in 2011 too.
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