ComEd apologizes for jolting customers with billing bugs (y2k related)

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They were in a hurry & didn't test.

link to Trib

Some selected text:

Since July, at least 200,000 customers--including residential, commercial and industrial--have experienced headaches ranging from no bills to estimated bills, late payment charges for bills they never received and trouble getting through to customer service agents.

ComEd traces the problems to the hurried installation last July of an Andersen Consulting system. Worried about Year 2000 compliance, new tax laws and last August's 15 percent discount for residential customers, utility officials wanted the new billing and metering software activated before fully testing it.

According to ComEd's most recent filings with the Securities Exchange Commission, the billing problems have resulted in a $470 million cash flow shortage from uncollected monthly charges. In the prior two years, annual cash flows were in the black, ranging from $24 million to $71 million.

-- Deborah (sorry@comed.chi), February 26, 1999

Answers

Let me try that again!

link



-- Deborah (oops@darn.com), February 26, 1999.


(sigh)

fingers crossed



-- Deborah (try@again.com), February 26, 1999.


That goofy link does not work. AAARRGGG. That is the address. If you so desire you can goto www.chicagotribune.com search ComEd it's there.

-- Deborah (thats@it.com), February 26, 1999.

Thanks Deborah. I will post this to the Y2K Failures list. I am not the greatest either with hotlinks but here goes:

http://www.chicagotribune.com/splash/article/0,1051,SAV-9902260226,00.html

-- Rob Michaels (sonofdust@net.com), February 26, 1999.


Hastily-installed, less-than-thoroughly-tested software systems.

This is going to replace baseball as our national pasttime this summer. It should be an interesting season.

-- rick blaine (y2kazoo@hotmail.com), February 26, 1999.



This is not the first bad report on Andersen. Going to be interesting to see how they fare after the end of the year - if they make it that far!

-- Paul Davis (davisp1953@yahoo.com), February 26, 1999.

So who says you have to test software before installing it it it it it it?

cash flow...smash flow - who cares flow? Mr K. says its going to be all right. Who gonna believe? Clinton's senior advisor or your accountant?

-- Robert A. Cook, P.E. (Kennesaw, GA) (cook.R@csaatl.com), February 26, 1999.


As more and more places try to get Y2K compliant at the last minute (not that I believe this to be possible -- Y2K CANNOT BE FIXED!), it is going to be interesting to see if Infomagic's "Charlotte's Web" analogy starts becoming accurate. Recall that Infomagic's position was that as strands of the web start to break, initially there are enough programmers and resources to fix, but as more and more start to unravel, there will come a point at which there is just too much broken with too little resources to fix it. And it just collapses from there....

-- Jack (jsprat@eld.net), February 26, 1999.

Should the new slogon of the year be "How many mistakes do you want to make today?" ;-)

-- Tim (pixmo@pixelquest. com), February 26, 1999.

closing blockquote tag

-- Donna Barthuley (moment@pacbell.net), February 26, 1999.


Just ended our fifth month in a new house still no electric bill. I have called twice to see what's going on, but they say "you'll get a bill in a couple of weeks, we are having problems with the new system". We'll see what happens.

-- Bill (y2khippo@yahoo.com), February 27, 1999.

(Donna, when someone's omitted the "/" in what-was-supposed-to-be-a-</blockquote>, it takes two </blockquote>s, not just one, to compensate. ;-)

-- No Spam Please (anon@ymous.com), February 27, 1999.

Still having problems......

Trib

ComEd's new bills heavy on details

March 22, 1999

BY BECKY BEAUPRE SUBURBAN REPORTER

Oswego treasurer Angie Daniels knew it was bad news when two thick envelopes arrived at village hall last month.

The packages were from Commonwealth Edison, and they were marked ``1 of 3'' and ``3 of 3.'' The middle section of the village's electric bill arrived the next day.

``I just started laughing,'' Daniels said of the 23-pound statement, which covered three months of traffic light electricity and cost nearly $20 to mail. ``I was ready to call and say, `Come pick this up.' ''

She isn't laughing anymore. The bulky bills are the intended product of a new computer system ComEd installed last summer.

The updated system was designed to generate more detail. In the case of Oswego and a few other suburbs, that means itemizing every street light and traffic signal in town--something suburban officials say is unnecessary and irritating.

Even before Oswego's infamous 23-pound traffic light bill arrived, Daniels had spent several months grappling with bills for the town's street light account. In September, they had skyrocketed from six to 10 pages to nearly 200.

``Every time a ComEd bill comes, I cringe a little,'' Daniels said.

A 23-pound electric bill can take up a lot of space on one's desk and doesn't exactly fit in a filing cabinet.

``They have been relegated to a storage closet,'' Oswego village administrator Bruce Bonebrake said. ``There is no other room.'' In Schaumburg, where electric bills used to be seven or eight pages long, three-inch-thick tomes began arriving two months ago. They are stacked alongside a desk in the finance office.

``The young lady who processes them was quite stunned,'' Schaumburg finance director Keith Wendland said.

She is now spending about five hours a month paying the electric bill, several more hours than she spent before, Wendland said.

Daniels also spends extra hours scrutinizing Oswego's bill. In December, ComEd's computer system accidentally sent the village a bill for $7 million--more than $6.9 million too much.

``I tend not to just pay them,'' she said.

ComEd's new system has experienced other difficulties, too. Bills have been delayed, sometimes arriving with a late fee attached.

ComEd spokesman Keith Bromery said the utility hopes to have the kinks worked out by May. But the bulky bills, which he said are only going out to a ``minority'' of towns on certain rate plans, aren't actually a mistake.

He said ComEd is working on suburbs' concerns by offering to send out summaries as brief as a few pages. For Oswego, that means the 23-pound traffic light bill should shrink to 20 to 25 pages.

Daniels is cautious, however. Her hopes went up a few months ago, when the lighting bill shrank to 10 pages--temporarily. ``Then they immediately went back up to 200 pages,'' she said.

Wendland also is hoping for relief. ``I think they are starting to get their act in order,'' he said of ComEd. ``They're killing a lot of trees in the forest.'' (SNIP) p.s. I just heard of yet another person I know that has not received a bill in months. He called them to see what was going on, the rep said no one in that building was being charged...would he like to be put down as the person to be billed (he doesn't own the building). The other people I know not billed? A multi million dollar corporation. (they moved & didn't receive a bill for at least 9 mos.

-- Deborah (infowars@yahoo.com), March 25, 1999.


Is this any way to run a railroad? I wonder if the decision makers are wearing big, floppy shoes and big red noses?

-- PNG (png@gol.com), March 25, 1999.

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