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Another ERCOT board member resigns as lawmakers criticize power grid operator for massive electricity outages

Firefighters clear snow and ice from a side walk outside of the Rebekah Baines Johnson Center in East Austin last week. After the near-collapse of the state’s power grid, seven board members of the Electric Reliability Council of Texas have resigned. Credit: Miguel Gutierrez Jr./The Texas Tribune

Another Electric Reliability Council of Texas board member has resigned after a winter storm caused the near-collapse of the state’s power grid.

Clifton Karnei, executive vice president of Brazos Electric Power Cooperative, is the seventh board member of the state’s power grid operator to quit this week.

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“We received word last night,” ERCOT spokeswoman Leslie Sopko said Friday. “I believe he is from Texas.”

The Fort Worth Star-Telegram first reported the additional resignation.

RELATED: Political contributions link ERCOT board to Abbott and the state committee now investigating the troubled entity

Unlike Karnei, the other board members who resigned this week reside outside of Texas. Lawmakers grilled ERCOT, and the Public Utility Commission that oversees ERCOT, during legislative hearings on Thursday. The Legislature’s investigations into how the power grid’s near-collapse left millions without power during subfreezing temperatures are continuing today in both the Senate and House.

One of the many criticisms lawmakers have lobbed at ERCOT and the PUC has been the lack of public warnings that many Texans were facing the loss of power for days, not for short increments during controlled, rolling outages they were told to prepare for.

“ERCOT was pathetic,” said state Rep. Sam Harless, R-Spring. “The PUC was non-existent.”

The other board members who resigned this week did so at an ERCOT board meeting on Wednesday. Then-board chair Sally Talberg acknowledged the “pain and suffering” that millions of Texans experienced during prolonged outages.

“All of our hearts go out to all of you who have had to go without electricity, heat, water, medicine and food from frigid temperatures and continue to face the tragic consequences,” Talberg said.


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