I'm actually waiting for PG&E to basically say "yeah we can't service your area anymore, due to the chance for wildfires", I mean wouldn't surprise me if they flip the power off if the wind blows any stronger than a mouse fart.
I’m trying to remember, do you do maintenance for them?Pge arguments are interesting. People want them to maintain the line more, but they don’t want pge to charge more money. Somebody has to pay for the maintenance.
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I’m trying to remember, do you do maintenance for them?
Don't forget the other arguments... "why am I paying for the maintenance when it's not my stuff that is being maintained" As an example San Francisco wanted to underground all wires, and of course like any big city they screwed the pooch on it, the more "affluent" parts of the city of course got it done first... because... and some other parts did but it went WAY over budget, because instead of stopping when the budget was getting low they decided to finish up a few areas, and of course this cost the people of San Francisco... ALL OF THEM, and we continue to pay off that debt with like a small charge on PG&E bills, even though we will never get it done. So the moral of this story, is even though you don't get any benefit from it, you still end up paying for it.Pge arguments are interesting. People want them to maintain the line more, but they don’t want pge to charge more money. Somebody has to pay for the maintenance.
Don't forget the other arguments... "why am I paying for the maintenance when it's not my stuff that is being maintained" As an example San Francisco wanted to underground all wires, and of course like any big city they screwed the pooch on it, the more "affluent" parts of the city of course got it done first... because... and some other parts did but it went WAY over budget, because instead of stopping when the budget was getting low they decided to finish up a few areas, and of course this cost the people of San Francisco... ALL OF THEM, and we continue to pay off that debt with like a small charge on PG&E bills, even though we will never get it done. So the moral of this story, is even though you don't get any benefit from it, you still end up paying for it.
I don't want to shift the blame to victims of a wild fire, but who's job is it really to maintain the area around PG&E lines? Should me in San Francisco be paying for PG&E maintenance half way across the state because they "average" the cost to everyone instead of raising local rates to reflect a larger maintenance budget per customer? Should PG&E be responsible for dealing with vegetation around their lines? Or should the county be forced to foot the bill similar to San Francisco footing the bill for undergrounding wires (which in addition to aesthetics, there was an argument for safety as well).
Either way, doesn't matter now, because of the lawsuits (and not going to argue how justified they are or not), means that the cost of them get distributed to ALL customers, so regardless of what happens I end up paying for stuff that in no way involves me.
This is literally the way every organization larger than 1 family, public and private, works and has worked throughout the entire world for the entirety of human history.Don't forget the other arguments... "why am I paying for the maintenance when it's not my stuff that is being maintained" As an example San Francisco wanted to underground all wires, and of course like any big city they screwed the pooch on it, the more "affluent" parts of the city of course got it done first... because... and some other parts did but it went WAY over budget, because instead of stopping when the budget was getting low they decided to finish up a few areas, and of course this cost the people of San Francisco... ALL OF THEM, and we continue to pay off that debt with like a small charge on PG&E bills, even though we will never get it done. So the moral of this story, is even though you don't get any benefit from it, you still end up paying for it.
I don't want to shift the blame to victims of a wild fire, but who's job is it really to maintain the area around PG&E lines? Should me in San Francisco be paying for PG&E maintenance half way across the state because they "average" the cost to everyone instead of raising local rates to reflect a larger maintenance budget per customer? Should PG&E be responsible for dealing with vegetation around their lines? Or should the county be forced to foot the bill similar to San Francisco footing the bill for undergrounding wires (which in addition to aesthetics, there was an argument for safety as well).
Either way, doesn't matter now, because of the lawsuits (and not going to argue how justified they are or not), means that the cost of them get distributed to ALL customers, so regardless of what happens I end up paying for stuff that in no way involves me.
This is literally the way every organization larger than 1 family, public and private, works and has worked throughout the entire world for the entirety of human history.
People hardly notice (much less appreciate) when they benefit at other people’s expense but are morally outraged when someone else benefits at at their expense. There are infinite examples.
Ranting about when the pendulum swings away from you just shows lack of insight about the times it swings back toward you. Plus it isn’t healthy to be consumed by frustration and anger about things that so far out of your control.
I agree that "for the better good" people pay for things that may not affect them directly whether it's infrastructure, schools, or what not. However there is a level at which that does stop, not going to get into where that should end now since that is a discussion better left to politicians who can actually stop it. But just to leave an example, we pay a bridge toll to cross any of the bay area bridges, why? That's under the umbrella of Caltrans, shouldn't maintenance for that come out of the totality of the Caltrans budget? It seems to be method of charging the "local" area for the infrastructure/maintenance because we are the ones that use it.This is literally the way every organization larger than 1 family, public and private, works and has worked throughout the entire world for the entirety of human history.
People hardly notice (much less appreciate) when they benefit at other people’s expense but are morally outraged when someone else benefits at at their expense. There are infinite examples.
Ranting about when the pendulum swings away from you just shows lack of insight about the times it swings back toward you. Plus it isn’t healthy to be consumed by frustration and anger about things that so far out of your control.