Friday, February 19, 2021

As Texas deep freeze subsides, some households now face electricity bills as high as $10,000

 Image: An Oncor Electric Delivery crew works on restoring power to a neighborhood following the winter storm that passed through Texas Feb. 18, 2021, in Odessa, Texas.

 “The last thing an awful lot of people need right now is a higher electric bill — and that’s unfortunately something a lot of people will get stuck with."

As the Texas power grid collapsed under a historic winter storm, Jose Del Rio of Haltom City, in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, saw the electricity bill on a vacant two-bedroom home he is trying to sell slowly creep up over the past two weeks. Typically, the bill is around $125 to $150 a month, he said. But his account has already been charged about $630 this month — and he still owes another $2,600.

“If worse comes to worst, I have the ability to put it on a credit card or figure something out," Del Rio said. ”There is no one living in that house. All the lights are off. But I have the air at 60 because I don’t want the pipes to freeze.”

When he contacted Griddy, his electric company, they advised him to switch providers, Del Rio said.

More @ ABC

8 comments:

  1. He must be leaving all the windows open to have a power bill that high.

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  2. I don't understand why the electric company saying to switch providers, they have a contract to sell electricity at a regulated rate, set by the state state PUC. Seems like price gouging to me. I wouldn't pay it and hire an attorney to sue them. Those are outlandish bills that have been all over the news and blogs.

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    1. I understand that the company was the cheapest overall in the past, but with energy running out in this instance, they had to pay more from the actually providers.

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  3. Texans can thank all the wacko Green-new-Deal solar & wind farm advocates. Their experience is a harbinger of things to come for the entire nation under the Progressive's regime

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  4. Why in the world would anyone sign up for a variable rate on their electricity?

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