Yuma Sun

Texas top utility regulator quits in fallout over blackouts

-

AUSTIN, Texas – Texas’ top utilities regulator resigned Monday in the widening fallout from blackouts triggered by an unusually heavy and widespread winter storm that left millions in the state without power and water for days.

DeAnn Walker, the chairwoman of the Public Utility Commission, is the highest-ranking official to step down in the aftermath of one of the largest power failures in U.S. history.

Gov. Greg Abbott appointed Walker to the commission in 2017, and she is one of two commission­ers who used to work in his office. In a letter to Abbott,

Walker said she accepted her role in the outages but that others should acknowledg­e their responsibi­lity, including gas companies and lawmakers.

“I believe others should come forward in dignity and courage and acknowledg­e how their actions or inactions contribute­d to the situation,” Walker wrote.

She resigned the same day Texas’ largest and oldest power cooperativ­e announced it was filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, and as the state’s attorney general launched an investigat­ion into one electricit­y provider, Griddy, whose customers incurred massive bills during February’s winter storm.

Abbott, a Republican, blamed the power failures on the state’s grid manager, the Electric Reliabilit­y Council of Texas, commonly known as ERCOT. But the three-member commission appointed by Abbott has oversight authority over ERCOT.

Abbott’s spokesman Renae Eze said in a short statement that the governor thanks Walker “for her years of service to the State of Texas.” The statement did not reflect on Walker’s performanc­e ahead of the outages.

Walker struggled in two lengthy appearance­s before legislativ­e panels investigat­ing the state’s electric grid breakdowns, the commission’s response and the lack of communicat­ion with the public over the approachin­g storm.

She initially said her agency has little control over ERCOT, but later said it has total control. Lawmakers questioned her knowledge of her agency’s authority and the decision to reduce or reassign enforcemen­t staff charged with policing the utility companies.

“Despite the treatment I received from some legislator­s, I am proud that I spoke the truth,” Walker wrote.

She was also criticized for a lack of communicat­ion about the approachin­g catastroph­ic storm. Walker testified that she spoke with Abbott’s office, as well as staff for Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and others several days before the storm hit to warn them about the weather and its potential impact on power distributi­on in the state.

Texas was hit with historic snowfall and single-digit temperatur­es in an icy blast that cut across the Deep South for days starting Feb. 14. More than 40 deaths in Texas – and double that toll regionwide – have been blamed on the storm and the resulting blackouts.

ERCOT officials have said the entire grid – which is uniquely isolated from the rest of the U.S. – was on the brink of collapse in the early hours of Feb. 15 as power plants froze in the cold and record demand for electricit­y to heat homes overwhelme­d the system.

At least six ERCOT board members have resigned in the wake of the power failures.

Also Monday, Brazos Electric Power announced it was filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, citing the punishing storm. The state’s largest and oldest power cooperativ­e said it received excessivel­y high invoices from ERCOT for collateral and purported cost of electric service during the storm, and that it was not prepared to pass those costs along to its members or customers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States