AUSTIN, Texas — The top executive of Houston's power utility told lawmakers Monday the company would lose momentum on changes after Hurricane Beryl if he resigned over the prolonged and deadly power outages that followed the storm plowing this month onto the Texas coast.
''I take personal accountability for not meeting our customer's expectations during Hurricane Beryl,'' Jason Wells, CenterPoint Energy's chief executive officer, told a panel of state senators in the Texas Capitol. CenterPoint will launch an outage tracker on Thursday to help prepare customers for the next storm and hire a chief communications officer to improve their messaging, Wells said.
The hearing marked the first time that Texas lawmakers have publicly grilled the CenterPoint Energy executive since the storm made landfall on July 8 and knocked out power to nearly 3 million people. Officials have said at least a dozen residents in the Houston area died from complications due to the heat and losing power, including hyperthermia, or when a person's body temperature rises far above normal.
In total, at least 36 deaths have been attributed to Beryl.
''Our constituents deserve answers,'' Republican state Sen. Brandon Creighton said, naming some of his constituents who died in the storm.
Wells was called to testify before the special legislative committee that is examining the company's failure to provide a timely outage tracker and an overall lack of preparedness for the hurricane. Wells said it was ''inexcusable'' that the company's outage tracker failed to deploy in a timely manner.
Republican state Sen. Paul Bettencourt, whose district includes Houston, asked Wells what he thought about calls for him step down by some frustrated residents in the community. Wells said the company is continuing to work with city residents in their post-storm efforts.
Gov. Greg Abbott and the Public Utility Commission have demanded answers from CenterPoint Energy, the city's largest utility provider, about why the outages lasted so long. Apart from the inquiry by lawmakers, the utilities commission has begun its own investigation.