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Popular Threads
The utilities are making a fortune. They have a dozen schemes a day to grab the consumer's dollars. You have to watch your bills all the time, i.e. AmerenCilco, for instance, does not apply any over-payment against your account. You have to physically call them and tell them to do it. If you do not realize this is going on, it will sit there in their account, gathering interest for them, while you wonder what happened to the over-payment. I found this out personally and when I called them on it, along with informing the ICC and the AG's office, they finally applied the over-payment to the bill. Of course, reading the bills are also a challenge in themselves. If I, with a Master's degree, have a hard time figuring out what they are doing, imagine what some older person living alone has to go through to figure it out.
It's bad enough that Illinois places so many taxes on top of the utility base rate, so that it costs, for instance, almost $50 a month to just have a phone in your house, let alone make any calls. If we do not rein in these utilities and make them responsible to providing reasonably priced services, the middle class will disappear under the weight of utility costs alone.
Here's hoping the Dems reverse their anti-consumer position before November because we all know the Big Business GOP could care less about actual people. And why is it that ComEd -- the power company -- doesn't actually make electricity? Who came up with that brilliant idea? (Let me guess, a Republican.)
I'm sure those consumers on the East Coast benefitted greatly from "more competition" when that deregulated Ohio utility let its electric lines fall into such disrepair one bad wire knocked out power to an entire chunk of the country across several states.
Are folks finally starting to understand that society actually needs a minimum baseline of regulations in order to protect us from the bottom-line-mad corporations? When companies start to worry more about their employees, colleagues, neighbors and consumers we can all revisit regulations -- until then the Enrons will go on being Enrons and without regulations we'll all get screwed. (Or worse, poisoned as the Pacific Gasses and Exelons of our country have done to their neighbors.)
The almighty dollar should never be more important than a real live person but don't tell that to the "pro-lie" party, RepubliCo.
There's a reason America puts "In God We Trust" on our money -- and corporations should try to understand why.
Freudian slip :) ... but you kids knew what I meant about the GOP's hypocrisy (ie, they're only pro-life til you're actually born, then they kick you out on the street and could care less -- unless you're a gazillionaire I s'pose.)
Now we know it was all a hustle.
The current rate freeze expires on January 1, 2007. No way Emil is going to let any legislation get out of the Senate that stands in the way of Exelon's upcoming payday.
Despite all of Rod's complaints about the auction plan, he has not taken one tangible step to stop it. All bark no bite.
AG Madigan is making a good effort to stop the auction, but it is an uphill battle from a litigation standpoint.
The Democratic Governor, the Democratic Speaker and the Democratic Senate President had four years to come up with a plan to deal with electric markets when the current rate freeze expires. They did nothing. Just remember that the next time you hear Illinois Democrats described as consumer advocates.
Adam Smith's invisible hand has a problem; it's not connected to a heart.