Cut the Cord and switched to an Antenna for TV

   / Cut the Cord and switched to an Antenna for TV #21  
City limits and water/sewer bill not optional...

Monthly charge BEFORE a drop of water is used is $150... so $1800 annually.

Summer water can add as much as $300 month.

It is just not here but other places like South Lake Tahoe... 2000 gallons a year... yes 2000 gallons annual use last year and still $1300... having the service turned off means water company pulls meter... to reset meter costs thousands of dollars...

This is how the district keeps year round revenues when use is primarily Summer months.

Are wells an option or is the groundwater too deep to drill a well? In my area everyone not living in town has a well and septic tank with no monthly charge.
 
   / Cut the Cord and switched to an Antenna for TV #22  
Are wells an option or is the groundwater too deep to drill a well? In my area everyone not living in town has a well and septic tank with no monthly charge.

Not really... my brother spent 40k in search of water for the farm and came up dry... there is water in the area... he did the soundings, geo reports and sunk two wells... one went down 800'.

The only positive if you can call it is the expense is a business expense... his wife still reminds him of his 40k extravagance on occasion.

Since I sue so little water much of the year I was thinking of an RV hose from the neighbor... last year around this time I average 44 gallons a day...

The water company offers a free consult and that is what I did... the person came out with all kinds of leak tablets and charts and when it was all said and done said he has nothing to offer... as I use 44 gallons of water in a 3200 square foot home... the account and meter fee are sizable and required since single family homes are required after a certain date to have home fire sprinklers...

The real issue is the "Water" bill in Oakland CA has gone from just another bill to one that can be a budget buster.. I run into this all the time managing rentals here... people are often in shock when that first bill comes... all the fixed charges have nothing to do with water used... we go though the process and show if you had not used a single drop of water your bill would still be this much.

As for the 400 gallon daily water use in June-November it is just the cost of keeping the garden and fruit trees and a backyard lawn....

With tiered water rates a homeowner up the street found it was cheaper to fill his pool trucking in water than to use the hydrant.
 
   / Cut the Cord and switched to an Antenna for TV
  • Thread Starter
#23  
I never have had a Section 8 family without cable and a nice TV for the time... projection, flat and even curved...

Add the latest version of the I Phone, Laptop and latest fashion in what they are wearing along with a high end lease car to that list too. I used to deliver to some Section 8 housing units in the Hayward Hills back in the 90's, and it was amazing how many Mercedes and BMW's that I saw in the parking lots. Dell was one of our main clients, so I was delivering them all over the place. Almost every day, somebody in a Section 8 unit would get a brand new Dell computer.
 
   / Cut the Cord and switched to an Antenna for TV #24  
Cell Phone, High Speed and even Laptops are often free or little cost to Section 8/assistance participants... plus reduced utility rates and even the 10 cent grocery bag charge is waived... etc...
 
   / Cut the Cord and switched to an Antenna for TV #25  
Kicked DTV to the curb years ago.

Get the TV Listings & Guide Plus app for your phones. You can set it up for local stations and add or delete stations you want/don't want. We get some stations I don't want and I have deleted them from my channel listing on the TV and the app.

We just have a few stations and shows we actually watch which isn't any different from when we had 150 channels. We watch the news every day. I watch big bang reruns most every day at 7pm. We enjoy the Thursday evening comedy shows. Sunday Morning on CBS is usually good.

Sometimes I watch PBS shows when they aren't fund raising. I have donated to them before but they always want more. I get annoyed with their soliciting so I don't donate any more. If they would accept what I'm willing to give and not hassle me for more I wouldn't mind donating a little every year.

I pay the two connection rate on Netflix and share it with my daughter. She pays for Amazon Prime and shares it with us. Between those, You Tube, and OTA TV we don't want for entertainment.

Any sports or other program that want's to tie their broadcast to a special subscription besides the ones I mentioned doesn't deserve my viewership.
 
   / Cut the Cord and switched to an Antenna for TV #26  
PBS here always had telethon auctions years ago... they were fun and I bought a welder and other things while supporting PBS...

Sadly the auctions are just a distant memory... happy to support back then but now refuse to be an ATM

Sorry Eddie for going off topic...

One thing is TV... especially unlimited TV can take over a person's life... seen it happen until they had a revelation and booted cable to the curb.
 
   / Cut the Cord and switched to an Antenna for TV #27  
City limits and water/sewer bill not optional...

Monthly charge BEFORE a drop of water is used is $150... so $1800 annually.

Summer water can add as much as $300 month.

It is just not here but other places like South Lake Tahoe... 2000 gallons a year... yes 2000 gallons annual use last year and still $1300... having the service turned off means water company pulls meter... to reset meter costs thousands of dollars...

This is how the district keeps year round revenues when use is primarily Summer months.

I sold a house in the big city up here and while the house was on the market the base bill for no water unless someone flushed the toilet was $250 a month. Sewer, water, storm water run off. Crazy!

The lot was tiny, 63 ft x 150 ft and the stormwater runoff fee was $80 month alone if I recall correctly.
 
   / Cut the Cord and switched to an Antenna for TV #28  
Yep... mom pays a lot for storm water runoff... the kicker is the storm water runoff from the neighborhood all drains to her land!!!

Not talking about natural flow but pipe storm drains, gutters and downspouts... she has two seasonal creeks on her property.
 
   / Cut the Cord and switched to an Antenna for TV #29  
Yep... mom pays a lot for storm water runoff... the kicker is the storm water runoff from the neighborhood all drains to her land!!!

Not talking about natural flow but pipe storm drains, gutters and downspouts... she has two seasonal creeks on her property.
They should be issuing her a credit :laughing:
 
   / Cut the Cord and switched to an Antenna for TV #30  
Speaking of ROKU, some of my savings gained from the antenna goes towards buying batteries for the ROKU remotes, particularly the ones paired to the sticks. I have never seen remotes gobble batteries so much. AAA batteries. We set them on solid surfaces because I read they were motion activated, but I do not know that for sure.

I've had a Roku for a couple years and I think it's still got the same batteries it came with, what are you doing that drains them so fast? We bought it when Spectrum started requiring cable boxes at $11 and change a month for even the "lifeline" ultra basic service we had. Turns out there's a Spectrum ap (clunky, but does the job) for Roku so we get the channel package we subscribe to without the box. There's quite a bit of free other programming available, but most of it's free for a reason. :thumbdown:

Eddie, depending on your Roku model, you might have volume control on it. Check the right side of the remote for volume buttons.

Mine has it, but it doesn't seem to work with my tv. Then again, we run the line outs of the tv thru a stereo amplifier for better sound...the remote may not control them.

Yep... mom pays a lot for storm water runoff... the kicker is the storm water runoff from the neighborhood all drains to her land!!!

Not talking about natural flow but pipe storm drains, gutters and downspouts... she has two seasonal creeks on her property.

I'm not even going to ask why they're charging her for storm runoff (I totally don't "get" California), but do they actually meter the storm drains? Are you responsible for any storm drains in front of your property even though they're technically on public property?
 

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