> News
Hot Wired
It was the
first electricity-rate increase our homegrown
utility had sought in more than 15 years — a paltry $6 per
average monthly
bill, CPS Energy officials projected. Despite being cajoled by Mayor
Phil
Hardberger to rally to CPS’s aid, the majority of San
Antonio’s elected leaders
balked.
Instead, they
offered the utility a dose of public
humiliation with a lesser 3.5-percent rate hike, and deferred
implementation
until after the peak temps of this summer have passed.
For that, the
San Antonio Express-News editorial board
called the rebels out by name and accused them of a
“shortsighted populist
gesture” while lauding CPS as “one of the best-run
power companies in the
United States.”
Ultimately, the
whole fiasco made no nevermind to CPS.
They’ve set about making up the lost revenue by levying hefty
gas and
electricity fuel “adjustments” of about 90 cents
per 100 cubic feet of gas and
2 to 3 cents per kilowatt hour of electricity. For one $300 electric
bill, the
adjustment alone tacked on $100.
This
spring’s rate-hearing exercise had some unintended
benefits, however. By putting CPS’s top personnel on the
stand, so to speak, it
wormed out some interesting admissions from the notoriously
tight-lipped
utility. Perhaps the worst brag that Steven Bartley, executive VP over
communications, and CEO Milton Lee made had to do with the
utility’s declining
workforce. The pair painted the loss of 500 employees over the past
five years
as a badge of fiscal discipline. But if one looks critically at that
claim (and
there is no sign that any on the Council have), one quickly finds the
true
price of the “re-org.” It’s taken out in
crippled safety standards, lost
morale, and legal fees. Interviews with dozens of current and former
CPS
employees, and a review of court dockets filling up with race-,
gender-, and
age-based discrimination lawsuits, suggest staffing changes have been
ugly and
forced.
San Antonio
attorney Alex Katzman is handling more than 25
discrimination suits against CPS. “This is across the board:
sexual harassment,
age, gender, race, but I’m only handling employment-related
cases. As a
governmental entity, they have a lot of immunities.”
Since CPS is
municipally owned, it falls outside the scope
of OSHA and other federal protections. Most of Katzman’s
cases are based on the
company’s failure to address employee complaints in a timely
manner.
“CPS
is slow to respond to employee’s allegations,” he
said.
“I think there’s a culture where complaints of
harassment and discrimination
just aren’t dealt with promptly and they’re not
dealt with fairly.”
From a
public-safety perspective, one of the most disturbing
shifts within CPS has been the restructuring of frontline service
workers and
changes in its mapping department. Because of reorganization,
outsourcing, a
few key outside hires, and goosed software upgrades, huge portions of
the
city’s electrical grid are simply not in the
utility’s online system.
Mapping-department employees say they are more than a year behind in
getting
network changes into the system even as the city grows by thousands of
new
residents each month.
A failed
transmission line in February led to a blackout in
the Medical District that left several San Antonio hospitals and
treatment
centers either in the dark or pulling on backup-generator power. It was
the
sort of failure that shouldn’t have lasted for more than an
hour, according to
CPS linemen who responded to the event. Instead it rattled on well over
three
hours and took a full two days for CPS to complete the repair.
Those I spoke
with blamed internal reorganization that took
the most skilled employees — four switchmen personally tasked
with protecting
the hospital district, military bases, and airport — and
required they join the
cross-training ranks in what essentially was a demotion intended to
diffuse
their experience across the ranks.
One former
switchman with 30 years experience inside CPS
explained it this way: “Linework is a craft that, to be
adequately trained and
skilled, it’s something you have to do every day. Every day.
You don’t have
room to do line work on a line crew for a couple of months and then
come off
and go into the underground bunch and do a little cable work
underground, and
then come out of there and go do some service and meter work, and then
maybe
eight months to a year come back to linework. That’s what
they’ve done, and the
quality of linework has gone down. The incidence of accidents have gone
up. The
incidence of outages to the customers caused by some kind of failure on
a line
crew’s part has gone up.”
During the 3
a.m. Medical Center outage, an underground
repair crew was tasked with restoring power to the cluster of
facilities that
included the VA Hospital, Physicians Plaza One and Two, and Methodist
Specialty
and Transplant Hospital. But after an hour of no progress, frantic
calls were
being made to a former switchman who had since stepped down to the
ranks of
“troubleshooter.” At first, the embittered
employee, who was not on call that
night, refused to respond. Gradually, his conscience began to wear on
him.
“At
first, I not only told them no, but hell no. Then I got
to thinking, ‘I can’t do that.’
That’s not the way I was brought up. I take
pride in my work. I told them, ‘OK. What circuit is
out?’”
It was the 754.
In less than 30 minutes the former switchman
was on the scene and power was being diverted to a second line,
restoring the
majority of the lost load before the underground crew met him on his
rounds to
the various
transformers.
For many of
these facilities, there are no alternatives to
CPS cables and lines.
“There’s
a huge cluster that has no generator backup, and
when they’re down, they’re down till someone gets
there to physically isolate
the cable that has failed and then switched to their alternate
feed,” said one
lineman.
An entire
section of faulty cable had to be removed and
replaced. “By the time he came in and did everything, three
hours had passed
by,” another lineman familiar with the event told me. It was
not a repair job
for the record books.
Another outage,
a downed power line taking out San Antonio
International Airport, offered the perfect training ground for newbies
undergoing cross-training. The airport even offered to pay the overtime
to make
it happen, but CPS management chose instead to send staff home, several
responders say.
Worse, the pole
that caused the outage had been inspected by
contract workers just a few months before the event. Would it have
mattered if
the pole had been “tagged” as needing replacement?
Probably not. Several
linemen insist that budget considerations have drastically reduced the
number
of poles being replaced this year. Linemen worry that reduced pole
replacement
coupled with a halted tree-trimming program mean more problems are on
the way.
Each of the
three regional CPS service centers — northwest,
southwest, and east — are running low on capital
infrastructure, must-haves
like high-voltage wire, transformers, poles, and conductors, several
linemen
say. That shortage would delay repairs in any major outage.
Many are
already afraid to respond to even so-called minor
emergencies because of the reorganization. Linemen are
“scared of who they may
be working with,” another tells me.
“That’s one reason they were having a
problem having people respond to storms.”
Consider it the
ascendance of the corporate mind over public
service.
SA attorney and
labor champion David Van Os is representing
the International Brotherhood of Electric Workers in two recently filed
lawsuits: one submitted in December 2007 for “fostering a
hostile work
environment”; the other, filed this month, alleges illegal
wiretapping of a
meeting between CPS officials and IBEW reps.
Van Os said the
most disheartening thing he has seen
happening within CPS over the past few years has been the
“adoption of a
cutthroat corporate mentality with senior managers and some mid-level
managers,
and first-level managers treating the workers in the manner of the very
worst
of the new Gilded Age corporate mentality. They’re treating
the workers as data
bits rather than as people.”
IBEW
International Rep Ralph Merriweather and others in the
union are convinced that CPS managers are intentionally sabotaging the
utility
to sell it off to the deregulated market. “We feel they have
purposely
implemented all these things, made the jobs so unbearable, customer
service so
low, that citizens will demand privatization,” Merriweather
said. “We’ve had an
[union] agreement here for 97 years. Right now, they’re not
responding to
anything we do.”
The IBEW sought
for months to negotiate with CPS before
filing its first lawsuit, Merriweather says. Though there has been at
least one
significant meeting between CEO Lee and Merriweather in recent weeks,
for the
most part CPS’s upper management have circled their wagons
and refused to
budge. As of press time, CPS officials had not made themselves
available for
this story [See “Damage Control,” Page 16].

“Don’t
call me at work. They record our conversations.”
That’s
how a typical conversation closes with those in
mid-level management at CPS Energy.
The cell is
fine, the man tells me, before the nearly
universal CPS-employee interview parting: “You’re
not going to use my name, are
you?”
I’ve
gotten the same treatment from the 20-some CPS Energy
employees I’ve met with these past several weeks.
They’re scared of
retaliation, but they’re more scared of what’s
happening at the shop; so they
speak to me, on background.
While CPS has
neither confirmed nor denied the charges
against it, with this many employees across a range of departments
expressing
the same concerns found in a wide-ranging, published employee survey
and a
variety of lawsuits, there’s likely something there worth
listening to.
One of the most
terrifying of the many recent internal
changes is the apparent meltdown within CPS’s mapping
department. Staff there
is engaged in a multi-year changeover from a graphics-based
computer-mapping
system to a more interactive network with GIS elements. Thanks to staff
reductions, they are more than a year behind schedule. That means that
any
changes or additions made on the electric grid during the last 12-18
months
simply don’t show up on the handheld devices the linemen rely
on, or on the
computer screens referenced by the systems operators overseeing them.
This fact
was confirmed by a variety of employees in the mapping department, the
service
centers, and at systems operations. The faulty maps also mean that in
many
cases what linemen and repair crews are visually looking at on the
ground is
not what their overseers at the operations center are seeing on their
computer
screens.
Even though
several mapping-department employees have been
at the work so long that they helped convert utility paper maps into
the first
computerized systems during the 1980s, they were not asked to join the
core
group of decision-makers.
“For
us, it was
painful, because we were seeing they were making a lot of mistakes. But
they
didn’t want us to be part of that,” says one
mapping employee. “More than
anything it was an ego thing.”
“If
you butted
heads with [the team leader], next thing you knew you were off the
project. He
just built his core team with only yes-men,” another said.
In about 2002,
rumors began to circulate that a flurry of pink slips was about to blow
through
the department. That’s when many joined the IBEW for the
first time. A new
manager was brought in from Bexar County Appraisal District and tasked
with
“shaking things up,” staff say. Predictably,
department employment began to
decline — from the low 20s to about 17 today, I’m
told. With the computer
transition ongoing, paperwork was backing up.
In an attempt
to
catch up, much of that paperwork was shipped to subcontractors in
India. Even
after the new system went online, problems in the paperwork produced
in-house
and in India meant the pace of entry remained stiflingly slow.
The new system
being used is more than a map in the traditional sense. It also
attempts to
mimic the way electricity flows in the real world, the way Simms-type
software
does with other elements of human infrastructure.

“If
it doesn’t work
out in the field, it doesn’t work on the map. If you try to
put something that
would electrically blow something up out here, it should tell you,
‘Boop. No.
You can’t do that. It electrically doesn’t make any
sense,’” one mapping
employee said.
Such fail-safes
are
intended to limit human error.
“Every
type of
facilities-management software has fail-safes built into it. For
example, it
won’t let you put duplicates in. It won’t let you
tie a 13 KV [electrical line]
to a 35 KV [electrical line] without some device between them. It has
specific
rules that it has to follow,” he continued.
Unfortunately,
the
quality of the paperwork was so poor that management allegedly chose to
disable
those fail-safes to allow the updating of the system. “In
order for them to get
their garbage data into the new system they turned a lot of those off.
They
requested that the software company that they bought the software from
turn it
off so they could get everything shoved in there and say,
‘OK, we’re done.’ So
now we’re dealing with all those issues and they wonder why
linemen are going
out there and virtually being electrocuted, because
everything’s messed up. The
maps that they are getting are not accurate.”
This is
confirmed
by a source of the first caliber: a systems operator working in
CPS’s control
center with 25 years under his belt.
“Somebody’s
going
to go out there and get killed,” the systems operator said
bluntly. “I already
told them, I’m not going to sit there and take the rap for
it.”
On the front
line
it works like this:
The systems
operator gets a report that a circuit has failed — maybe
power’s gone out in
your subdivision. He sends a line crew or troubleshooter to check it
out, but
what they find doesn’t gel with what their handheld devices
say should be
there.
They call back
to
the systems operator and report: “Yeah I’m here and
I’ve got this three-phase
conductor down at this location.”
“Well,
hold on,”
the SO reports back, “I don’t show it
here.”
So you have a
dead
circuit. A crew that has no idea where the line’s at. The
lineman spots a
switch that theoretically could close the circuit. He checks his
handheld. The
handheld spits back: “No Switch Found.”
Even the
control
center screens are drawing a blank.
“We’re
not getting
the right information,” the systems operator said.
“I’ve got guys calling me in
here and we can’t even see where they’re at. We
can’t spot ’em. We have to ask,
‘Do you have a switch? Do you have a device? Do you have an
address or
location?’ to try to pinpoint where [they’re] at,
because the map is not up to
date.”
That’s
not the way
it’s supposed to work. Generally, in an outage, the control
center monitoring
the electrical network would be able look and see where switches should
be
opened or closed to fix the outage, or if they need to shift the load a
certain
direction. “We don’t have a clue to
what’s right. We just hope nobody gets
killed,” the operator said.
Like the
linemen
interviewed, the mapping employees say they are terrified of the
potential
ramifications of what is happening in their department.
“We’re
scared to
death. We know all that’s going on. We don’t want
to be held liable for the
process that’s going on now,” he tells me.
“In six months to a year, they won’t
be able to hide it.”
In mid-April,
the
IBEW Local 500 leadership approached City leaders with their concerns
in a
five-page letter. Inside, Local President Gary Kirby asked 35 questions
about
conditions at CPS before calling for the resignation of CEO Lee, Vice
President
of Energy Delivery Alfonso Lujan, Vice President and Chief
Administrative
Officer Paula Gold-Williams, and “any other management
officials who are
destroying the integrity, respect and trust of the citizens/employees
of CPS
Energy.” The union included the workplace survey.
Two weeks
later,
Kirby wrote to the members of the Board of Trustees asking for a
hearing so the
Board could listen to employees directly. No response.
Two weeks after
that, International IBEW Rep Merriweather wrote back to Mayor Phil
Hardberger asking
for assistance in “speeding up the process” in
setting up that public meeting.
The Mayor’s office says they spoke with Kirby as recently as
last Friday, when
he asked them to “hold off” because the Union is in
negotiations with CPS. “So
we’re waiting on them to some extent,” said
Communications Director Rebeca
Chapa.
Negotiations
between the union and CPS’s attorneys continue this week. One
request made by
CPS attorneys was that the IBEW work to have this article stopped,
according to
a union rep.
After hearing
that,
I made one more call to CPS’s public-relations department and
left a voice-mail
message. Then I called in on another line and was told that company
spokesperson Theresa Cortez was on the other line and placed on hold.
When the
line picked up again I was told Cortez was “not
available.”
It’s
important to
remember we’re dependent on CPS for more than our lights.
Increasing profits at
CPS brought the city $235 million last year even as we enter
deficit-budget
territory for the first time in years [See “I O(wn)
U,” Page 15]. The millions,
however, are not a valid excuse for city leaders to continue turning a
blind
eye to goings-on within CPS. To the contrary, it’s greater
cause to
investigate, and deeply.
In the past
year,
there’s been a lot of noise about steering the utility toward
greater
investment in conservation and renewables. Some have suggested that the
mission
of the utility needs to be updated to reflect a deeper environmental
commitment. Before anything like that can happen, the City must claim a
greater
degree of control over CPS. Until then, the pressure of providing San
Antonio
“low-cost power,” as their mandate requires, will
drive management to push
staff to limits at the expense of safety.
When the gears
and
sprockets — the meter readers, mappers, or linemen
— are strained or abused, a
meltdown can’t be far behind. •
Killer Bill
Your bill went
up
500 percent? Don’t blame the meter readers.
Chances are,
they
didn’t read it anyway.
When Katrina
Knudsen got her May statement from CPS it hit hard: $409 hard. The
worst they
had seen at their rental house off Vance Jackson. The property owner
said the
most she had ever paid there was $300 or so. But Katrina and her
husband sat
down at the table and ate it anyway.
When the next
one
rolled in at $904, they threw down with the utility. “My
husband said, ‘Well,
there goes our stimulus check.’ I said, ‘No
way.’”
During the
squabble
with downtown, Knudsen learned an interesting fact: Their gas and
electric
meters had been estimated, not read. For two months in a row.
Overworked
meter
readers say they are simply unable to keep up with the pace as more
staff quit
because of poor working conditions.
“They
treat us like
we’re animals — or machines. They expect us to get
in that phone booth, unzip
that shirt, and here comes that letter S,” said one meter
reader. “It’s
starting to get more rougher and it’s not as enjoyable as it
used to be.”
Even as CPS
plans
for remotely read meters have been delayed, management has failed to
keep up
the workforce. Instead, when a staffer drops out, they split up that
worker’s
route and roll it into some of the other readers’ existing
routes.
Meter readers
used
to average about 580 homes per day. But the new average has risen to
over 900
homes, according to several meter readers interviewed for this story.
Some
routes are even higher.
“There’s
times that
you just want to give up, but you can’t because you have to
provide for your
family,” said another reader. “I know
we’re shorthanded, but help us. Hire some
people.”
The increase
has
meant not only a string of “mandatory Saturdays”
for readers, but also that
entire districts in San Antonio — representing as many as
tens of thousands of
meters — aren’t being read.
HINT: Look for
the
all-telling “E” at the bottom of your bill before
you write your next check to
CPS.
_____________________________________________________________________________________
I
O(wn) U
Who’s
running this
show? Let me humbly suggest that when it comes to all things
volt-inspiring,
it’s not you. (Of course, I’m sure you’d
do a fine job. Or at least as good as
Milton.) But it also is sadly not the City of San Antonio, despite
being the
titular head of CPS Energy and deriving a full quarter of its operating
revenue
from the 13-percent share it has in the utility’s earnings.
From the latest
round of revenue-bond legalese:
“Except
as
otherwise specifically provided in this Ordinance, the Board of
Trustees shall
have absolute and complete authority and power with reference to the
control,
management, and operation of the Systems and the expenditure and
application of
the revenues of the Systems subject to the provisions contained in this
Ordinance, all of which shall be binding upon and shall govern the
Board of
Trustees.” [Emphasis added.]
All the City
gets
is one seat on the Board and some authority in approving the members,
who serve
for up to 10 years a pop — that and purview over rate
increases.
SUGGESTION:
Next
CPS Board meeting you attend, be sure to step off the sidewalk when The
Man
walks by.
MEMO TO SELF: Communications Avenue all jacked up. Seek alternate route.
On 8/13/2008 12:07:59 PM, Elaine Wolff said:I finally had time last night to read Greg Harman's excellent article on CPS. What insights! First, if CPS is treating its employees as commodities and creating such despair in the working ranks as he wrote, what could happen when CPS adds the four new nuclear power plants that it wants? Second, if 13% of the profits go to City government, where do the rest of the profits go? Who stands to gain by treating employees as less than human? We always need to follow the money. Finally, if this is a methodical march toward privatizing CPS, who is in line to buy CPS? Again, we need to follow the money. The first thing that happens with privatization is the complete loss of accountability and oversight. I think what we are witnessing at CPS is a management team that is made up of "Fundamentalist Capitalists" (a term I just invented). These are management people who are well connected to economic elites and have convinced themselves that greed is the ultimate good and that the common good is liberal crap and weak-kneed idiocy. The amount of government money available for nuclear power is so large that the greed factor is bringing them out of the woodwork and they are losing all sense decorum as they fall over each other to grab the loot. It's elbows high and to hell with everyone else. Great article. And good insights. Thanks, Eric Lane
Posted for Eric by Elaine Wolff. If you run into trouble posting a comment, let us know asap: jmonzon@sacurrent.com, ewolff@sacurrent.com. Thanks for reading!
On 8/13/2008 10:46:41 PM, fedupwithit said:so how do we complain? How do we end this? Estimated bills? Who and where can we stand up and complain about this?
On 8/14/2008 5:09:01 PM, DrewK said:Elaine, I'm pretty sure the 13% to the city (about $250mm)comes right off the top of gross revenue ($1.9 billion). What they do with profits is anyone's guess, although I suspect Lee is beefing up any way he can to prepare for its eventual sale and his subsequent retirement.
I emailed Greg's story the day it was published with some of my own comments requesting that the IBEW be heard and public hearings held to every city councilman, some staffers, the mayor, city manager, a county judge, a commissioner, and two big shots at Xnews. To this day, I have received nothing to indicate my email was even received or read for that matter. With my elected officials ignoring me, the Xnews monopoly (no offense intended Greg & the other godly folks at Current) refusing to scrutinize our city's largest asset, and the executives at CPSE giving high fives behind closed doors as they estimate my electricity use, I am left with a feeling of hopeless abandon. In a way, I've been as distanced from the newscoverage and decisions made in downtown San Antonio, as I am the decisions made in Washington DC.
On a lighter note, I would like to say that this microcosm of national corporate incestry (our beloved SA) and its officials, are far from immune to our efforts of exposing this corruption like their big brothers in DC. We live in a small town, if you're so inclined, you can find the mayor and talk to him, you can find your councilperson and talk to them. The Xnews, as Greg has proved in the past, can only ignore an issue for so long and as truths in this article continue to find other avenues to the public discourse, they will no longer have a choice.
The pain is in the meantime, as we allow Milton Lee to highjack our utility for his personal gain and a complicit council to pursue yet more urban sprawl and fancy roads using the blood money from CPSE employee sweat and COSA resident "estimated" energy use.
Thanks to Greg for his epic ability to bring a story together, leaving jaws hanging as he goes.
On 8/14/2008 5:16:25 PM, DrewK said:Also, Greg you didn't get into this aspect much, but what better way to destroy the green building movement and transition to energy efficieny than to estimate energy use? Does this even take explaining? If Johnny San Antonio gets an attic fan, new double pane windows, upgraded insolation and his energy bill doesn't go down, is he going to continue in this direction? Will his neighbors?
Below is a link to CPS' website where you can view their recommendations to reduce your energy bill.
http://www.citypublicservice.com/Residential/Energy_Efficiency/index.asp
I suppose they're estimating my efficieny upgrades too?
On 8/14/2008 5:59:40 PM, gharman said:fedupwithit: your only real recourse is with the city council. now before you start throwing old cabbages at me, understand that while the city has limited controls at cps, they are the ones that can change the utility's mission or chose to open an investigation.
getting your councilmember motivated to start poking around cps or visiting with the electrical workers union may take some effort. after all, cps did just save the city from going into deficit spending this budget cycle with magically appearing "unanticipated" millions. makes one wonder what they needed that rate increase for when they can work such magic just with a couple months of high temp.
i have yet to hear one word from cps folks about my story, though i continue to call them to try to find out if their IT department has solved the riddle of my missing emails. i've also heard morale within the ranks at cps has inflated just a bit with that wee bit of love and attention. i'm going to assume it all means the story was dead-on and, perhaps, only reflects the scum at the surface of the barrel as opposed to the bottom scrapings.
so, if you're serious about getting satisfaction from cps, i'd get to punching digits. it won't be long before milton lee and his bunch is back at the council box, hat in hand, begging permission for a nuke venture likely to take many, many billions and even more years to complete. that is: cps needs you on board. and while they may not work like it, council is still boss of this little red wagon.
The $15 or $16 million skim every month from CPS means it operates with impunity. It's no secret that the utility operates like a private feifdom. I began working there soon before Emperor Lee took the throne. Morale among employees was much like morale at any municipality. Everyone felt confident and safe that their job was safe. Perhaps a bit too confident. Soon after he took over, the PR quacks launched an internal propaganda campaign to try and sell the employees on the eventuality of dereg. It was called the "Milton Lee Tour" where he went around to various CPS facilities assuring employees that their jobs were safe and that the only jobs lost would be through attrition. He didn't bother to explain that his plan was to speed up attrition by making virtually everyone else at the company miserable during his tenure. He began hiring mid- and top-level people from the outside - something that was unheardof before. The top-level positions were virtually always internal promotions. Those people, in turn, were charged with basically turning the company's culture upside down. It was ugly when I left four years ago. I can't imagine what it's like now. It was clear from the beginning that the aim was to prepare the utility for the city's eventual sale of it. Problem is, the city is faced with a couple of hard facts: Sale means no more skim and a lower than expected offer because of all of all the bullshit happening there. The city is going to have to sell at some point if things continue the way they are now. It's just not equipped to deal with the issues that CPS faces right now. If there was ever a company that you did not want to work for, CPS would be it.