You can coordinate from anywhere. That he wasn't doing that is its own issue, and I'm assuredly not trying to absolve him from that. I'm just saying, you know, he's not an expert in logistics. He's not an expert in infrastructure. He can't personally get people's power and water back on. The hard work that's on the ground? That has to be done in Texas? He can do some of that symbolically, but he's not really doing the work that needs to get done.
Really, where he's needed most is arguably in DC, doing the work of, you know, a Senator. Working with other Senators.
Like John Cornyn, who was doing exactly that.
His family could have flown to Cancun without him, and I wouldn't have had any issue with that (well, yeah, I would have had issues, but they'd have been more along the lines of "travel during COVID" and "must nice to have the resources to just get away while everyone else is stuck"). It's that
he took the opportunity to check out when Cornyn and a good chunk of the TX House delegation were doing what they could to help, like normal elected officials.
Now, none of the other Senators, including on his own side, like him, so that's going to be a problem, but there we are.
Al Franken once said he probably liked Ted Cruz more than any of the other Senators did, and he
hated Ted Cruz.
Honestly? I also get not investing in infrastructure. I live in the Greater Seattle Area. People mock us for our reaction to snow, and we get snow every year. It doesn't always stick, and we usually have it for a couple of days before it melts, but we get it. And (in part because we just moved here and I didn't go anywhere) I don't know what the nearest street in my neighbourhood that got plowed was. I have a guess, but I know ours didn't, and I know the one you turn into to get to our street didn't. Because we don't have the infrastructure. We have chosen to spend it elsewhere.
But Texas had this problem once before. And making sure all these things are winterized is an expense that may to an extent feel unnecessary. But winterizing, unlike maintaining enough snow plows to deal with an extremely hilly area, is much more of a once-and-done expense, and it's going to turn out to have cost Texas more not to have done it. I just wonder if this time, they'll learn their lesson.
Ars Technica had an
article about the grid failure, and one of the outside experts (who has nothing to do with the Texas situation) pointed out that if we had winterized for the 2011 event, that likely would not have been sufficient for this event (this was colder for longer with more frozen precipitation). He also pointed out that can't really test if our winterization is sufficient until a similar event occurs, which won't be for years, possibly decades.
As for "deserving" to have these extraordinarily high power bills, no, I disagree with that. Frankly, I am of the opinion that utilities should be socialized and definitely shouldn't be for profit, and those exorbitant increases in power bills should not be happening, spread over months or in a single bill.
Again, the extraordinarily high bills are for customers with variable-rate plans, which exposes them to spikes in the wholesale price of energy. That's a small minority of consumers. Most of us have fixed-rate plans through our providers, so we're insulated from those spikes. Our bill next month will be higher for a variety of reasons, but it won't be in the thousands of dollars range.
And I'm not saying they "deserve" those bills, I'm just saying that being on a variable-rate plan exposes you to some risk, and you should be aware of those risks before signing on. Now, my wife read yesterday that some customers who had been on a fixed-rate plan were placed on a variable-rate plan without their knowledge, so they're getting screwed. Again, per our Congressman, some of the relief funds coming in should go towards paying those bills.
Our grid
does need real regulation and oversight, but I disagree that it needs to be completely socialized. It's cheap and stable under normal conditions, we just need to make sure it's also stable under abnormal conditions, which will make it less cheap.
Finally read the water meter yesterday, and the situation isn't anywhere near as dire as we were fearing - it was on par with the previous month's usage. Maybe a little more than we've used in past Februaries, but not a severe outlier.
God we were lucky.