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Why Was Cowboys Stadium Exempt From Blackouts?(Immoral to blackout hospitals but not football)
cbs ^ | 2/3/11

Posted on 02/03/2011 8:14:16 AM PST by bestintxas

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To: NeverForgetBataan; glorgau
They are called G-E-N-E-R-A-T-O-R-S and they usually have wheels and a tow bar.

Do you realize the size of generators required to power that stadium? We have one at work that is 1.2 mega watt for a hospital size building. It is NOT on wheels, but rather inside a 20' X 36' enclosure.

61 posted on 02/03/2011 10:15:04 AM PST by Arrowhead1952 (America has two cancers - democrats and RINOS.)
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To: SoothingDave

“Why the heck doesn’t Texas have enough power to meet its needs?”

They depend on wind power, they deserve to be without power!


62 posted on 02/03/2011 10:15:52 AM PST by dalereed
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To: SoothingDave
http://dfw.cbslocal.com/2011/02/02/blackouts-anger-dallas-hospitals/

“Jorie Klein runs disaster management for Parkland Hospital, and is still upset that her hospital was included in the rotating outages. “We were not happy,” she said. “You can’t just go down for 15 minutes and come back up. It really does disrupt hospital care.”

Because of the sensitive life-saving equipment, hospitals are considered “critical care facilities,” and supposed to be exempt from rolling blackouts. That’s exactly what Presbyterian Dallas was led to believe. “We were of the understanding that hospitals and other critical-care providers were not supposed to be affected by planned outages,” said hospital spokesman Stephen O’Brien.

Oncor admits that a mistake was made. “We are sorry this happened. We are in a process of refining our processes, so in the unlikely event of future mandates for rotating outages, hospitals will be excluded,” said Oncor spokeswoman Catherine Cuellar.’

Apparently they are NOW exempted. . .but not when it began.

63 posted on 02/03/2011 10:32:27 AM PST by Hulka
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To: BraveMan

“No hospitals suffered under the rolling blackouts. Save your hand-wringing immorality passion play for the DU; here we embrace the truth.”

http://dfw.cbslocal.com/2011/02/02/blackouts-anger-dallas-hospitals/

Care to revise your statement?


64 posted on 02/03/2011 10:35:20 AM PST by Hulka
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To: bestintxas
People, put away the tin foil hats. Homeland Security said the stadium could not be part of the blackouts because the security systems run on electricity and they could not guaranty a secure environment.

I don't know why generators weren't used but that is the official explanation.

65 posted on 02/03/2011 10:39:27 AM PST by Bigoleelephant (Lawyers are to America what lead was to Rome.)
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To: bestintxas
I think this epitomizes a degradation of our society when ailing people in hospitals suffer in orde to allow football venues to be unaffected.

It would be, if that statement were true, except that the statement is a lie, and as such doesn't epitomize anything but a hysterical rant unsupported by fact.

Even as your other link showed, the hospitals which lost power lost power incorrectly, because of a failure of process -- NOT because they cut off power to the hospitals to give it to the stadium.

Further, your original link explains, and I assume you read the entire article, that the stadium would be highly unlikely to be affected by a rolling blackout because it gets multiple power feeds, which would have blackouts at different times.

So all the Stadium had to do was ask that the rolling blackouts be coordinated so that all their feeds were not out at the same time.

If the hospitals in question had also paid for multiple feeds, they might not have gone black even when the company screwed up. For the record, my company has a lot of sensitive electronics equipment, so we pay for dual feeds. Occasionally one is scheduled to be off, and we are informed ahead of time so we can shut down sensitive equipment or put it on an internal UPS for the duration.

But going back to the main point, there is absolutely NO evidence, because it simply is NOT TRUE, that anybody made any decision to take power from a hospital and give it to the stadium.

On the greater point -- I agree with making sure the stadium had power at all times. That's a major event that the city went to considerable trouble to obtain; you screw with that, nobody comes anymore and you lose whatever it was that you thought was important enough to get.

I would hope that even if you think the preliminaries aren't important, that you would understand the impossibility of your local utility doing a rolling blackout of the stadium during the superbowl when hundreds of millions of people are watching a game.

Yes, that stadium is more important than the few thousand people at a time that could otherwise get power if you had perfect ability to give out power and you took it from the stadium, which of course isn't the case anyway.

Because in fact a rolling blackout is a blunt instrument, not a finely tuned process. They aren't cutting off "just enough" people, they just shut down chunks of usage that they can manage. my guess is that you are probably running at under 98% capacity when doing the rolling blackouts, so the .05% capacity used by the stadium is dwarfed by the 2% that simply is going to waste because we can't control a blackout to the level of individual houses.

If we had a perfect, smart grid system, the "rolling blackout" would be replaced by a house-by-house power limitation, and houses would be programmed to provide power first to critical needs like heat and refrigeration, and homeowners would then be able to program what their priorities were for power.

In other words, instead of cutting a house to 0 for 15 minutes, and then they go back to full power for 45, you'd just cut everybody's house's total power avialability by 25%, and let them decide what things they want to blackout. The house could do their own rolling blackout of individual appliances if it wanted.

66 posted on 02/03/2011 10:39:27 AM PST by CharlesWayneCT
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To: bestintxas

Bookmark


67 posted on 02/03/2011 10:45:27 AM PST by dragnet2 (Diversion and evasion are tools of deceit)
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To: MCCC
I find it interesting that the utilities cannot keep up with the demand during the cold but have little or no difficulty keeping up with the demand in the summer when all the A/C is running. Just saying.

Residential demand for natural gas to heat homes competed with utility need for natural gas to generate electricity. That doesn't happen in summer. See the final bullet point of article below (it's a nice succinct article in any case):

http://www.ktre.com/Global/story.asp?S=13963839

68 posted on 02/03/2011 10:45:48 AM PST by Puddleglum ("due to the record harvest, rationing will continue as usual")
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To: Arrowhead1952

“Do you realize the size of generators required to power that stadium? We have one at work that is 1.2 mega watt for a hospital size building. It is NOT on wheels, but rather inside a 20’ X 36’ enclosure.”
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Yes Arrowhead, I understand the power logistics, but the “excuse” from the Oncor mouthpiece was that they needed the power to ensure “security” at the stadium.

Run the metal detectors with generators and put the da#n reporters in a tent with a generator to power their wittle laptops. Then restrict to essential personnel only.

It could be done. There is obviously NO will to do it.


69 posted on 02/03/2011 10:46:02 AM PST by NeverForgetBataan (To the German Commander: ..........................NUTS !)
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To: dalereed
“Why the heck doesn’t Texas have enough power to meet its needs?” They depend on wind power, they deserve to be without power!

You would think a Conservative Republican state would "Man Up" and get more power plants built. We need more Nuclear power plants.

70 posted on 02/03/2011 10:49:08 AM PST by Doe Eyes
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To: Izzy Dunne

Where is there evidence of the hospitals being affected?

XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX

Here ya go!

Blackouts Anger Dallas Hospitals

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/2668082/posts?page=1


71 posted on 02/03/2011 10:49:49 AM PST by dragnet2 (Diversion and evasion are tools of deceit)
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To: bestintxas
The entire notion of 'rolling blackouts' is a disgrace!

Texas should have enough backup power to handle this type of situation.

But, this occured in Calif. when generators were taken off line so prices would spike.

Stop building windmills and build real power plants!

72 posted on 02/03/2011 10:50:40 AM PST by fortheDeclaration (When the wicked beareth rule, the people mourn (Pr.29:2))
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To: SoothingDave
Exactly!

I called my state Senator, representive and the Governor expressing exactly just that!

73 posted on 02/03/2011 10:52:09 AM PST by fortheDeclaration (When the wicked beareth rule, the people mourn (Pr.29:2))
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To: SoothingDave
Why the heck doesn’t Texas have enough power to meet its needs? Is this some third world country? It gets cold every year. They should plan for this. I’d be embarrassed if I were a Texan.

If this were California, Texans would be having a good laugh, while telling all they deserve it.....

((This event is classic))

Last heard, Texas was getting power from Mexico...

74 posted on 02/03/2011 10:53:10 AM PST by dragnet2 (Diversion and evasion are tools of deceit)
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To: Hulka
Oncor admits that a mistake was made. “We are sorry this happened. We are in a process of refining our processes, so in the unlikely event of future mandates for rotating outages, hospitals will be excluded,” said Oncor spokeswoman Catherine Cuellar.’

Morons.

75 posted on 02/03/2011 10:57:28 AM PST by fortheDeclaration (When the wicked beareth rule, the people mourn (Pr.29:2))
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To: bestintxas

It’s Jerry’s world here in Arlington. We just live in it. My business is less than a half mile from the stadium and we had a blackout yesterday.


76 posted on 02/03/2011 10:57:58 AM PST by manic4organic (We won. Get over it.)
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To: NeverForgetBataan
but the “excuse” from the Oncor mouthpiece was that they needed the power to ensure “security” at the stadium.

Another thing that has not been mentioned is the spike getting the stadium back on line after the peak load get to normal. There were several larger buildings in Austin that were exempt from rolling blackouts for that very reason.

Also, they did have two large tents set up near the stadium and the 70 MPH+ winds took one down. The TX National Guard assigned to provide additional security was going to use them for the stupid bowl.

77 posted on 02/03/2011 10:58:05 AM PST by Arrowhead1952 (America has two cancers - democrats and RINOS.)
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To: Bigoleelephant
And what did Enron do to Calif. when it took generators off line to spike the prices?

Stop believing everything the politicans tell you.

It is a disgrace that Texas had rolling blackouts because of the incompetency of the Government, but to add insult to injury, they make sure the elites aren't effected by them, just the 'little people'

78 posted on 02/03/2011 11:00:12 AM PST by fortheDeclaration (When the wicked beareth rule, the people mourn (Pr.29:2))
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To: CharlesWayneCT
A rolling blackout is the way third world countries deal with their power problems, not a free market nation.

The problem was caused by the Government, and it was the people who did the suffering.

When people accept the rolling blackouts, the Gov't can use any excuse to control our power.

So, it was an error of the process that the hospitals lost power, and it was an error in construction that led to pipes freezing and both errors were paid for by the people, not those making the errors.

In the real world, people are fired for these kind of errors.

79 posted on 02/03/2011 11:04:40 AM PST by fortheDeclaration (When the wicked beareth rule, the people mourn (Pr.29:2))
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To: Dick Vomer
because we even have politically correct douchetards in Austin that bought into the global warming scam and are shutting down oil, coal and natural gas plants for windmill farms of Pickens.

I was told Pickens was a genius...

80 posted on 02/03/2011 11:24:58 AM PST by dragnet2 (Diversion and evasion are tools of deceit)
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