Sunday 13 January 2013

Texas couple fit to be tied in red tape, stimulus weatherization cash more trouble than it was worth

Tuesday, Dec 11, 2012, 09:49AM CST

By Mark Lisheron

Viewed in one very particular way, carefully following the bureaucratic contours of a $327 million stimulus energy efficiency program, the weatherization of Brandi and Byron Hockaday?s south Austin home is a success story.

Rules and guidelines were followed. Contractors and inspectors returned again and again to check the work. And when things weren?t right Austin Energy made them right at its own expense. And none of it, or almost none of it, cost the Hockadays a dime.

And yet, after more than two years and well over $14,000 spent, no one involved, least of all the Hockadays, believes they should have gotten involved with the federal weatherization assistance program in the first place.

On Oct. 31, after the latest of dozens of complaints, Austin Energy customer service representative Ann Salerno put an official end to its relationship with the Hockadays.

?For many months while assisting you, Austin Energy has exceeded its role as the involved electric utility,? Salerno said in a letter, one of a fistful Brandi holds in her hand on the sofa in their living room. ?Austin Energy staff has gone above and beyond its obligations, and, at this point, there is nothing else Austin Energy can do to assist.?

But what about the gas line left exposed and running right alongside the air conditioning line in the bedroom wall? The positive test for mold? And the incessant cycling of an air conditioning system that is supposed to be the best in the industry?

All of the contractor errors, the unexpected visits to fix things that never got fixed. The arguing that one time nearly led to a fistfight. The derision and condescension from at least one of the Austin Energy officials.

?They damaged our house, they put our family in danger and they?ve repeatedly said we need to be done with this,? Byron says, unable to stay seated next to Brandi. ?That?s what?s flooring us here. We?re tired of this shit.?

Spend five minutes with the Hockadays, and you are convinced tired isn?t at all the right word. They have painstakingly filed every document - paper and electronic - generated by their case. They recorded phone calls with workers, contracting supervisors and Austin Energy program leaders. They?re already tag-teaming their latest contractor.

The Hockadays aren?t tired by a long shot.

Pulling up to the Hockadays? home in a neat, middle-class neighborhood, it is difficult to grasp how, indeed, they ever got involved in the program.

There is an older model, silver Jaguar in the Hockadays? driveway of a nicely maintained 1,400-square-foot home.

The Hockadays built this house themselves in 1999. Both of them had good-paying jobs with a commercial printing company until day care costs for their two children made it more cost effective for one of them to stay home.

?We flipped a coin, and I became Mr. Mom,? Byron says. ?It worked out because I wanted to get my own mobile IT business started.?

It worked out until June of 2010 when Brandi was laid off after 13 years with the company. In an economy that a congressional majority thought only a nearly $1 trillion stimulus could help, the Hockadays? combined work experience came from an industry in decline.

Brandi started investigating and found that the family now qualified for food stamps. They enrolled the children in Medicaid for their health care. And when she went to the Austin Energy website she spotted a house ad for a ?Free Energy Program.?

She filled out a two-page application sometime in late July.

The program the ad referred to was part of the Weatherization Assistance Program, the U.S. Department of Energy's $5 billion contribution to the $862 billion American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009. The goal of the program was to help low-income Americans save money on their monthly bills by making their homes more energy efficient at no cost to them.

Joseph Guerrero, now the weatherization program coordinator for Austin Energy, says his company dispatched the inspector based, according to the program?s guidelines, on little more than the Hockadays? current combined income.

An interview with the Hockadays, a visit to the home, past earnings, the value of the home, even the Jaguar in the driveway was not part of the calculation, he says.

?We had no authority to question any of it. It?s not arbitrary,? Guerrero says. ?Had we denied it for any of those reasons, you can bet TDHCA would have been notified.?

On August 4 an inspector came to the Hockaday home and did a series of energy tests.

?On his way out the door, he told us it was one of the nicest homes he had been in since he started doing the inspections,? Brandi says. ?He said, if anything, we?d probably be eligible for low-energy light bulbs.?

Unknown to the Hockadays at the time, Austin Energy was under threat of having its $5.9 million stimulus grant yanked by the state Department of Housing and Community Affairs. Texas Watchdog reported Austin Energy had managed to weatherize just 56 homes in the 18 months since the stimulus bill passed. Only four of the 44 agencies in the weatherization program had done fewer homes.

In the first year of the stimulus contractors statewide had spent $3.7 million, mostly on administrative costs, and had weatherized a total of 47 houses. Program directors from all over the state complained they were under tremendous pressure by Housing and Community Affairs to spend their stimulus grants.

"Is time running out for this program? Absolutely," state program director Michael Gerber said of Austin Energy at the time. "We will de-obligate funds before we let one penny of this funding go unspent."

Two months after the initial inspection, Robert Meredith, the owner of a second contractor, Go Green Squads, came to the Hockadays? door with good news. The initial tests showed they qualified for a new air conditioning system.

The air conditioning system they had was working fine, Byron says. The inside unit had been replaced in 2008, and the outer unit had been repaired in the past couple of years, he said.

Meredith, Byron says, pressed them to decide. A new energy-efficient system would help them realize hundreds of dollars in savings.

?He said we were about to lose this if we didn?t decide and that we had to get this done,? Byron says. ?My initial reaction,? Brandi says, finishing his thought, ?was ?Wow. Awesome.? Byron?s reaction was, don?t muck around with it. I love my AC. Byron gave in.?

A ?deceptively complex? government program

The decision to install a new air conditioning system in the Hockaday home was based on calculations punched into thresholds set by the federal government, nothing more, Guerrero says.

At no time did Austin Energy officials issue a directive to speed up or increase spending on the units they were weatherizing, he says.

Susan Meredith, Meredith?s wife and the company?s co-owner, says Austin Energy gave the company 10 days from the time a work order was generated to start work. Never did Austin Energy call for spending over and above that recommended on the work orders, she says.

On Oct. 8, 2010, Go Green Squads installed an new air conditioning system and thermostats. The $2,433.27 in expenses was paid for by the federal program, which allowed for a maximum of $6,500 to be spent on each housing unit.

?And for nine months we thought it was the best program in the world,? Brandi says. ?We felt like we won the lottery.?

Until the day Byron came home and felt warm. The Hockadays regularly set their thermostat at 75 degrees. The temperature read 77 degrees, and to get there the air conditioning unit was running for hours at a time without cycling off.

Thus began a series of calls and responses from contract workers. They did temperature readings. Had Byron seal and insulate his attic door. The ductwork was checked. The plenum, an air circulation chamber in the attic, was rebuilt. Several times.

During these months of trial and error, the Hockadays reported condensation on their vents and a musty smell in the house.

Around one of the openings in the attic, Byron found black soot he thought was mold. The contractors insisted it be referred to as a mold-like substance. In January of this year the Hockadays had tests done that determined the mold-like substance was mold.

At the same time, the Hockadays? monthly utility bills were now exceeding the bills for the same months with their old air conditioning system.

In the absence of solutions, Byron offered troubleshooting suggestions like checking the coil that were routinely ignored, he says. It seemed as though the workmen were going through the same motions again and again. During one visit insults were exchanged and challenges made before Byron and a crew member could be calmed down.

?They were coming here all the time, all different times of day. They?d never call, they?d just show up. Then they never did anything. It was like watching monkeys hump a football,? Byron says.

From then on, Brandi systematically worked her way up alerting the chain of command at Austin Energy to their problems.

On Dec. 20, 2011, Austin Energy ordered another full inspection of the home and followed it with a systematic retracing of all the steps that had so far bedeviled the other contractors.

But not until March 20, 2012, did the company reach the conclusion that the air conditioning system installed by Go Green Squads needed to be replaced. The coil Byron had been pointing to was designed for a four-ton air conditioning system. It had been trying to cool the house in a three-ton system.

?There definitely was a problem with the system,? Susan Meredith says. ?And we were very committed to fixing their system. But there are so many different factors involved. That is why I say this is a deceptively complex program.?

Austin Energy decided that it wouldn?t be Go Green Systems but McCullough Heating and Air Conditioning that would install not only a new air conditioning system but a new furnace.

The cost, $8,604.81, was more than three times the first system. The company did some additional calculating and cut two checks to the Hockadays totalling $453.58, an estimate of the cost of the additional energy consumed by the old system.

In all, Austin Energy turned over just $3,000 in bills for the Hockaday work to Housing and Community Affairs for federal reimbursement. Austin Energy assumed the rest.

Guerrero said he didn?t want the blot on a program he is proud of.

?I thought it was in the interest of everyone involved that we change out the equipment for a new system,? Guerrero says. ?Our goal was to satisfy a customer who had some extreme concerns. I think that by looking at the facts of the case alone, this was not a normal course of business for us.?

By the overall standard of Austin Energy work, the Hockadays weren?t normal business. Of the 1,886 units weatherized with stimulus funds, Austin Energy went over the $6,500 budget 13 times, a check of the records by Texas Watchdog showed.

Nine of the thirteen were total bills under $7,000, one of them over the limit by 83 cents.

Despite its slow start and by the decidedly low standard set by a program beset throughout?with administrative incompetence, poor workmanship and allegations of fraud Austin Energy was a solid performer.

(You can track the program?s performance and that of all the other local programs in the Weatherization Assistance Program in charts provided here.)

Once threatened with a loss of funding, Housing and Community Affairs eventually shifted more than $3 million more from laggard programs to Austin Energy. The program spent all but $1,100 of its $9.2 million, Guerrero says.

And while Texas Watchdog tracked a rather dismal record of workmanship problems statewide, Austin Energy performed better than most. (You can examine the results of eight spot inspections of contractor work done by the Department of Housing and Community Affairs did over two years here.)

?One house out of all those we worked on is a pretty good record, I think,? Guerrero says.

Utility: Responsibilities fulfilled

But what of the record at that one house?

In the weeks that followed, the Hockadays discovered a water buildup in a garage ceiling that showered water and sopping drywall on computer hardware Byron had stored there. Negotiation with the contractor for reimbursement came to an impasse when the Hockadays wouldn?t surrender the hard drives for replacement.

McCullough tracked the moisture problem and in July rebuilt the plenum, return and filter system.

The installation of the air conditioning system, Byron says, has juxtaposed an air line unsafely with a gas line running to the new furnace. The Hockadays have demanded an inspection. McCullough insists they already deemed the parallel lines safe.

The Hockaday home gets cool, with digital thermostats festooning the house to prove it. But Byron swears this new, top-of-the-line energy efficient air conditioner still cycles for hours.

It is December, and in the cool weather the Hockadays can?t be sure, but all of that cycling, Byron says, isn?t going to save them any money come summer.

And if something more should go wrong, Austin Energy has said it won?t be coming around any more.

In the hundreds of units done by Go Green Squads as one of the six contractors used by Austin Energy, Susan Meredith says she never experienced anything like the Hockadays.

Understanding the cold calculating of eligibility and rehabilitation, Meredith still wonders if this program ought to have been serving a family like the Hockadays. She thinks the couple knew what they were doing, that they ?gamed the system.?

Austin Energy and its contractors, she says, were caught in the classic quandary: Was there too much government or not enough government?

?In hindsight we shouldn?t have bent over backwards,? she says. ?We spent so many hundreds of dollars we didn?t bill for trying to make them happy. All we did was create a bigger problem.?

The weatherization assistance program, at least at the start, would not allow anyone to walk away from the Hockadays, Guerrero says. Austin Energy, he says, has more than fulfilled its responsibilities.

The Hockadays do not believe that. It takes them nearly three hours on the sofa to tell their story, and only because they are forced to leave out all sorts of details. The Hockadays are consumed by the details.

Brandi is working again, at home and as a virtual assistant at a fraction of her old salary, she says. Byron is still working to make a go of his business. Their combined income, Brandi says, would easily make them eligible for the Weatherization Assistance Program if it were available today.

Knowing what they know now, the Hockadays say they would have never applied. But having done it, having gone through it, they aren?t about to give up.

?From the time we applied, all we expected them to do is do their job right,? Byron says. ?That?s all we asked all along. I don?t think that?s too much to expect. Do you??

***
Contact Mark Lisheron at 512-299-2318 or mark@texaswatchdog.org or on Twitter at @marktxwatchdog.

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Photo of light bulb by flickr user ikewinski, used via a Creative Commons license. Photo and video of the Hockadays by Mark Lisheron.

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Thank You! Your comment is awaiting approval.

Byron Hockaday

Wednesday, 12/26/2012 - 06:36PM

Sorry I didn't get around to responding to our story sooner with the holidays and busy schedules during these times. In regards to Susan Meredith, my family and I have never even met this person, but she continues not to take responsibility for her company's mistakes. Austin Energy had to come in here with another contractor to do repairs to the numerous problems created by her company. We had to do an "open records request" with Austin Energy to have some sort of paper trail to show what work was done to our home by them. Upon viewing the initial work order submitted by GoGreenSquads in 2010, it also shows her company billed Austin Energy and subsequently us tax payers for an additional $220 for work that was not done to our home. We brought this to Austin Energy's attention but have not yet been told if her company reimbursed Austin Energy or the Weatherization Assistance Program. Also, during the time her company worked on our home, they did not hold their own HVAC license but instead subcontracted out to small licensed HVAC companies. If we had known this initially or was given a choice of contractors under the program, we would have never ever chosen GoGreenSquads...they did not know HVAC but only contracted out the work!

Finally, it was her company that came to our home initially suggesting we get our AC changed out through the Weatherization Assistance Program because it would help assist in lower our energy costs. At that time, my wife had been laid off from her job of 12 years and our household income fail drastically, so we were looking for ways to keep our heads above water which included looking for ways to lower our energy costs. We have worked hard for decades and will continue to, but sometimes people fall down and have to get back up. Anyone with common sense can see that Susan Meredith and GoGreenSquads has "gamed the system" as she falsely stated about us. My family and I are hoping 2013 will be a much better year, but remember our story and do yourselves a big favor by not allowing such a company into your homes!

If you or someone you know has dealt with GoGreenSquads and had similar problems with their work, please contact us here through Mark Lisheron at the Texaswatchdog.org

Source: http://www.texaswatchdog.org/2012/12/texas-couple-fit-to-be-tied-in-red-tape-federal-stimulus-weatherization/1355173503.story

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