Just got charged for reading it
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Australia checking in. We have the price per Kw, and the number of Kw consumed.
Also Australian. I get a $0.87 per day supply charge plus kWh used.
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Is this some USA joke I'm too European to understand?
You're allowed to buy electricity from a separate broker than your "power company" so they split the bill between power usage and service fees plus there's state and local taxes.
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I always thought BT should get into the property market. They could sell a house, then rent that house to its new owner, then charge them a fee for using each room.
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2% TRT contribution fee.
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This is also how a $5 speeding ticket becomes $500. Thanks officer dipshit.
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$50 fee for other people using solar panels
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This post did not contain any content.wrote on last edited by [email protected]
I’ve tried setting up bank draft for my electric like 6 times, to avoid the 3% “convenience fee” for using a credit card. For some reason, it will not work. They have the option, I set it up, it says I need to wait several days to use it, and then it just vanishes from my account.
Calling the company gets me a rude person who barely speaks English. Government subsidized monopolies. Internet is even worse.
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This post did not contain any content.wrote on last edited by [email protected]
$389.69(My math was off…. Sorry) $390.68I had to sorry.
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Is this some USA joke I'm too European to understand?
In the UK it's all rolled up into the "service charge". Including the "loads of other companies couldn't manage themselves properly and went bust and we had to take on their customers fee"
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$389.69(My math was off…. Sorry) $390.68I had to sorry.
That's all they want you to look at anyway
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Is this some USA joke I'm too European to understand?
Yeah probably. I’m in the US. Here’s how my bill is broken down and how much it costs for 1000kWh:
Generation Service Charge: $117
Customer Charge: $10 flat fee
Distribution Charge: $94
Transition Charge: -$1
Transmission Charge: $45
Net Meter Recovery Surcharge: $16
Revenue Decoupling Charge: -$1
Distributed Solar Charge: $4
Renewable Energy Charge: $0.50
Energy Efficiency Charge: $31
Electric Vehicle Program: $1 -
I’ve tried setting up bank draft for my electric like 6 times, to avoid the 3% “convenience fee” for using a credit card. For some reason, it will not work. They have the option, I set it up, it says I need to wait several days to use it, and then it just vanishes from my account.
Calling the company gets me a rude person who barely speaks English. Government subsidized monopolies. Internet is even worse.
Not sure your location, but in the us at least most banks have a bill pay service where they will send a paper check for you at no cost.
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The worst for me is my gas bill. My bill is usually around $50-$60 per month, and when you break it down, the actual gas I use is $3. The rest are fees.
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Yeah probably. I’m in the US. Here’s how my bill is broken down and how much it costs for 1000kWh:
Generation Service Charge: $117
Customer Charge: $10 flat fee
Distribution Charge: $94
Transition Charge: -$1
Transmission Charge: $45
Net Meter Recovery Surcharge: $16
Revenue Decoupling Charge: -$1
Distributed Solar Charge: $4
Renewable Energy Charge: $0.50
Energy Efficiency Charge: $31
Electric Vehicle Program: $1wrote on last edited by [email protected]720kWh, Germany:
- Consumption charge: 183€
- Base fee: 182€
- Electricity tax: 15€
- Revenue tax: 72€
Total 450€
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You're allowed to buy electricity from a separate broker than your "power company" so they split the bill between power usage and service fees plus there's state and local taxes.
Being allowed to on paper and actually being able to are wildly different things. They're monopolies in most areas that get away with it by stringently denying that fact. Same with cable companies.
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In the UK it's all rolled up into the "service charge". Including the "loads of other companies couldn't manage themselves properly and went bust and we had to take on their customers fee"
Same in Germany, it's called "base fee"
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The worst for me is my gas bill. My bill is usually around $50-$60 per month, and when you break it down, the actual gas I use is $3. The rest are fees.
If fees are independent or partially independent of consumption, i would consider jumping to all electric.
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Not sure your location, but in the us at least most banks have a bill pay service where they will send a paper check for you at no cost.
Not sure your location
I bet it's Texas.
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You're allowed to buy electricity from a separate broker than your "power company" so they split the bill between power usage and service fees plus there's state and local taxes.
You're allowed to buy electricity from a separate broker than your "power company"
I'm curious about this, would you be willing to elaborate?
Where I live we don't have a choice of electricity providers for my home. Are you talking about states that have deregulated energy markets?
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I always thought BT should get into the property market. They could sell a house, then rent that house to its new owner, then charge them a fee for using each room.
I would be the shithead that would rotate from room to room daily just to fuck their billing up.
company I worked for had a customer that did this with virtual machines. every single week they would request their VMs from last week to be decommissioned and new ones to be built in their place. not bad if there's only five or six. they had this done to over 300 VMs. we accepted for two years, the length of the contract and then promptly dropped them, hard.
the collective backlash caused the company to go bankrupt. they attempted to sue but our lawyers had already created enough documentation to prove we had successfully executed the contract the best of our abilities and had decided to not renew based on high operational costs attributed to the high maintenance requirement of their account and recommended they seek help from a larger competitive service.
the chaos they put operations through was horrible but was only part of the hell they unleashed. we had to dedicate a billing representative to their account because they contested every-single-fucking-bill. these calls would drag on for weeks before ending with them agreeing to pay what we were charging them, just before starting up for the next billing cycle.
point is, just because you're locked in contract doesn't mean they're in control.