Texas' Public Utilities Commission approves development of opt-out rules for smart meters
EL PASO, Texas (AP) -- The Public Utility Commission has decided to develop a set of rules so consumers can opt out of the smart meters installed in millions of Texas homes and businesses.
Consumers have opposed the new
meters, citing possible health hazards and privacy concerns. Some have
installed steel cages around their analog meters to prevent utility
workers from replacing them with the new digital units and one Houston
woman held a gun to impede a utility worker from replacing her meter.
PUC spokesman Terry Hadley said Friday that an opt-out would leave already-installed smart meters in place but disable the devices' radio frequency capabilities.
A draft of the new rules will be
written and submitted for public comment, Hadley said. After that, the
PUC will vote again on whether to adopt them, which means there's still a
chance the opt-out will fail. But, he said, "at this point the Commission is leaning toward an opt-out."
Smart meters allow for remote metering via radio frequency and are make the billing process cheaper since there is no need to send utility workers to read them. The meters also provide real-time information on energy consumption and help utilities prevent grid overloads during peak times. They also report to the utility when there is a power outage, making reconnection faster.
In websites and meetings
organized by PUC, those against smart meters have spoken of possible
government snooping and violations of the Fourth Amendment —unreasonable
search and seizure — as well as the chance that hackers could access
people's information from the meters.
On a petition template that's
posted on www.bantexassmartmeters.com , meters are called "surveillance
devices" because they record the household occupants' activities and can
be used to "gain a highly invasive and detailed view" of their lives.
Smart meters record consumption in 15-minute intervals.
Health hazards from the radio frequencies emitted by the meters have also been cited. The Public Utilities Commission says the meters have a lower impact than cellphones and microwave ovens and are well within Federal Communications Commission's standards for radio frequency devices.
It's likely that consumers who
opt out will have to pay to have their meters read. As part of the
rule-writing process, the Commission will gather information on how much
it costs to send employees to read the meters and what disabling the
radio frequency device would cost.
Users in California and Nevada
pay between $75 and $107 to have the devices replaced along with monthly
fees ranging from $8 to $10 to have the meters read. Meanwhile, Vermont
legislators decided in May that utilities cannot charge users that opt
out.
About 93 percent of the nearly 7
million smart meters in Texas' competitive markets for electricity,
mainly in Houston and the Dallas-Fort Worth area, have been deployed,
Hadley said.
news.yahoo.com 14 Dec 2012
There sure will be no such news for the 'Nanny State' of Australia.
Australia is truly a prison island, where the masses are 'forced' into slavery.
The word democracy is morphed into corporatocracy.
Laws are passed through for the sole benefit of corporations.
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