Current:Home > MarketsTexas Gov. Greg Abbott demands answers as customers remain without power after Beryl -AssetVision
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott demands answers as customers remain without power after Beryl
View
Date:2025-04-21 04:01:51
DALLAS (AP) — With around 350,000 homes and businesses still without power in the Houston area almost a week after Hurricane Beryl hit Texas, Gov. Greg Abbott on Sunday said he’s demanding an investigation into the response of the utility that serves the area as well as answers about its preparations for upcoming storms.
“Power companies along the Gulf Coast must be prepared to deal with hurricanes, to state the obvious,” Abbott said at his first news conference about Beryl since returning to the state from an economic development trip to Asia.
While CenterPoint Energy has restored power to about 1.9 million customers since the storm hit on July 8, the slow pace of recovery has put the utility, which provides electricity to the nation’s fourth-largest city, under mounting scrutiny over whether it was sufficiently prepared for the storm that left people without air conditioning in the searing summer heat.
Abbott said he was sending a letter to the Public Utility Commission of Texas requiring it to investigate why restoration has taken so long and what must be done to fix it. In the Houston area, Beryl toppled transmission lines, uprooted trees and snapped branches that crashed into power lines.
With months of hurricane season left, Abbott said he’s giving CenterPoint until the end of the month to specify what it’ll be doing to reduce or eliminate power outages in the event of another storm. He said that will include the company providing detailed plans to remove vegetation that still threatens power lines.
Abbott also said that CenterPoint didn’t have “an adequate number of workers pre-staged” before the storm hit.
CenterPoint, which didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment following the governor’s news conference, said in a Sunday news release that it expected power to be restored to 90% of its customers by the end of the day on Monday.
The utility has defended its preparation for the storm and said that it has brought in about 12,000 additional workers from outside Houston. It has said it would have been unsafe to preposition those workers inside the predicted storm impact area before Beryl made landfall.
Brad Tutunjian, vice president for regulatory policy for CenterPoint Energy, said last week that the extensive damage to trees and power poles hampered the ability to restore power quickly.
A post Sunday on CenterPoint’s website from its president and CEO, Jason Wells, said that over 2,100 utility poles were damaged during the storm and over 18,600 trees had to be removed from power lines, which impacted over 75% of the utility’s distribution circuits.
veryGood! (6582)
Related
- See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
- Human Rights Campaign declares state of emergency for LGBTQ+ Americans
- California’s Methane Leak Passes 100 Days, and Other Sobering Numbers
- Shoppers Praise This NuFACE Device for Making Them Look 10 Years Younger: Don’t Miss This 67% Discount
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- I’ve Tried Hundreds of Celebrity Skincare Products, Here Are the 3 I Can’t Live Without
- As Snow Disappears, A Family of Dogsled Racers in Wisconsin Can’t Agree Why
- Hospitals have specialists on call for lots of diseases — but not addiction. Why not?
- The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
- Of Course Princess Anne Was the Only Royal Riding on a Horse at King Charles III's Coronation
Ranking
- Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
- Calif. Lawmakers Rush to Address Methane Leak’s Dangers
- The hidden faces of hunger in America
- ALS drug's approval draws cheers from patients, questions from skeptics
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- A judge temporarily blocks an Ohio law banning most abortions
- Dirtier Than Coal? Under Fire, Institute Clarifies Its Claim About Biomass
- Pippa Middleton Makes Rare Public Appearance at King Charles III and Queen Camilla’s Coronation
Recommendation
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
Today’s Climate: June 11, 2010
Climber celebrating 80th birthday found dead on Mount Rainier
What Chemicals Are Used in Fracking? Industry Discloses Less and Less
Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
Electric Car Bills in Congress Seen As Route to Oil Independence
Planned Parenthood mobile clinic will take abortion to red-state borders
Why Pregnant Serena Williams Kept Baby No. 2 a Secret From Daughter Olympia Until Met Gala Reveal