Recent comments in /f/newhampshire

movdqa t1_j3za1c0 wrote

Reply to comment by Boats_are_fun in Breakfast pizza by No-Historian-6391

You mean like bacon and eggs? Never tried that before. My approach would be to take a regular cheese pizza, fry up some bacon and eggs and throw it on. We don't have any leftover pizza to try it in the morning but next time!

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movdqa t1_j3z4pal wrote

I just pop a leftover slice from the previous evening in the toaster oven, sprinkle some dried red peppers and I'm good to go. I love twice-cooked pizza.

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RelationshipJust9556 t1_j3y69ey wrote

well they are being proactive with people going solar they split the bill into something that you have to pay even if you never use a watt of their energy.

In your case, compare usage, you must be using a ton more power then you used to. look up on tier page they typically have graphs to show you month to month year to year consumption numbers

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ForklkftJones t1_j3xs9wq wrote

This is very interesting because I was going to make a post about budget billing, but I will tack my question onto this post.

So I added up my year of billing versus the amount that eversource will bill me every month based on my usage. My math comes out to a savings of approx $485.94 under their budget billing.

I saw other states with posts about this, but i did not see a post from the illustrious and strongly opinionated members of our New Hampshire Reddit.

Have any of you tried this? Are any of you using it right now?

(Ps screw CT for getting recreational weed yesterday)

Source: www.eversource.com/content/nh/residential/account-billing/manage-bill/budget-billing

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draggar t1_j3xjpod wrote

Not sure if you're Eversource but I would think it's fairly standard, but YMMV:

https://www.eversource.com/content/nh/residential/account-billing/manage-bill/about-your-bill/understanding-my-bill/understanding-supply-and-delivery-charges

TL;DR and oversimplified:

  1. The cost to bring it from the source / supply to your local system
  2. The cost of maintaining your local supply system
  3. Government fees (etc.)
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TheMobyDicks t1_j3xg0lb wrote

Most towns have noise ordinances based on decibels and time of occurrence. And, for most towns, the earliest one can go above X decibel level is 7:00 AM. Town planners rarely want to deal with public complaints. Talk to a sympathetic City Councilor or Select Board member.

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