My provider keeps screwing me with estimated readings in excess of $400+, when my actual usage has been consistently under $200/mo. Granted they do credit the average when they actually take a real reading, I’m not a loan company and I’m getting frustrated overpaying.

  • Check with your neighbors. If this is happening to them, too, your electric company is using y’all to earn pennies of interest for free. Call your local news agencies and tell them your electric company keeps consistently overcharging you and give them that “not a loan company” line. Local reporters are incredible at investigating this kind of shit and other people seeing it on tv will encourage them to speak up as well.

  •  TWeaK   ( @TWeaK@lemm.ee ) 
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    fedilink
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    353 months ago

    This is a common tactic of utilities recently, to overcharge and build up credit. Basically they want to hold onto your money and earn interest off it.

    • i’m on a ‘budget’ plan, where the bill is the same every month, adjusted once per year. the muni-run utility always adds more on top of estimated average bill–which i then have to pay. i always have a surplus built-up at the end of the ‘year’ of at least 1.5-2x the monthly bill amount. and no, they don’t pay interest on the surplus, but they certainly do charge late fees and interest if you ever fall behind or don’t pay for a month or two.

  • It looks like simple ratio gears in series. Each alternating dial turns in the reverse direction of the previous. Since all you’re doing is reading off numbers, the direction of rotation doesn’t matter.

    If you watch it for a bit, one dial will move. It’s probably the one on the far right, but you can verify this through observtion. The dial on the opposite end probably won’t move perceptively as long as you live there - that’s a total number since the device was installed and it could take decades to increment by one.

    Take a picture every month on the same month-day; make a spreadsheet and record your kwh cost, and multiply that by the difference from the reading from the previous month. Taxes and fees aside, that should be your bill.

    How you fight this overcharging & occasional refund, I have no idea. You might call your local township/city/whatever and see if you can track down the regulation office and find out if you can legally file a complaint, or if this practice is allowed.