How high is your electric bill?
Deep Dives
Explore related topics with these Wikipedia articles, rewritten for enjoyable reading:
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Lower Colorado River Authority
12 min read
The article references Austin's 1999 water security deal with LCRA. This Texas state agency manages water supply, flood control, and electricity generation across Central Texas, making it crucial context for understanding Austin's water future.

Correction: Last week I wrote that the City Auditor has eight employees. In fact, those are just the leaders listed on the department website. The office actually has 29 full-time employees.
Fraud at Austin Energy
The big news today is a City Auditor report about a former Austin Energy employee who defrauded the utility of nearly $1 million:
Between fiscal years 2018 and 2023, we found that Ybarra paid fictitious vendors around $980,000 using his purchasing card. During this period, he paid at least 30 vendors through his purchasing card. Of these 30 vendors, only eight appear to be registered City vendors.
Good stuff. You can read the whole report here.
As you might imagine, some view this as evidence that the city needs a third-party audit. But another conclusion would be that the city should simply invest more in its in-house auditing team.
Rich people problems
For its house-hunting series, "The Hunt," the New York Times interviewed a couple that recently relocated from a 4-bedroom house in Barton Springs to Palm Springs, Calif:
They thought about moving to Tucson, Ariz., or back to California. “We were not liking either climate in Texas — political or weather,” Mr. Barenholtz said. “We were spending more time at our lake house in Northern Michigan in the spring and fall along with the summer, and yet our electric bill in Austin was $2,000 a month in summer, even when we weren’t there.”
A reader alerted me to the story and asked: Is this hyperbolic, or does this really happen to some people? Did they leave their AC on at 65 and have a big pool that they chilled ice cold while they were away?
The reader, who lives in a 1,700 square foot home in Central Austin with a partner and two kids, only paid $97 for electricity in July and $215 for the total utility bill.
The number was stunning to me too. The entire bill for our three-person household was consistently under $200, even in the hellish summer of 2023. Granted our house was barely 1,000 sq ft, we didn't water our grass and my wife's preferred indoor temperature is well above average.
But then I talked to a friend who has a family of four in an enormous house in West Austin with a pool. He told me his total utility bill is close to two grand. So if I ...
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