According to an email provided to KHOU 11 News, the Federal Reserve Bank said it could no longer host the event to comply with the order.
HOUSTON — CenterPoint Energy has reached a settlement in its 2024 rate case that will lead to lower electric bills for Houston-area customers.
Other Texas cities also ranked high for single-family building permits including Dallas, Austin, San Antonio and New Braunfels.
The rate decrease is expected to result in a $50 million loss in revenue every year to the company, a monthly rate reduction of $0.82 for residential customers and $1.28 for small business customers,
Looking for something to do in the Houston area this weekend? Check out this weekend's guide! All events are subject to change, and this list is not comprehensive.
Tammi Wallace, the Thrive Event’s co-founder, president, and CEO got an email from the Fed at nine that night, telling her they could no longer host.
The 621 area code will encompass the Greater Houston metropolitan area and surrounding communities such as Baytown, League City, Missouri City, Pasadena, Pearland, Sugar Land, and The Woodlands, even stretching from Harris County into Austin, Brazoria, Chambers, Fort Bend, Galveston, Liberty, Montgomery, San Jacinto, and Waller counties.
The 2025 Houston AutoBoative Show takes place Wednesday through Sunday at NRG Center. It's the combined annual auto and boat show and a good reason to take stock of the Greater Houston auto industry.
CenterPoint Energy (NYSE:CNP) said late Wednesday that its Houston Electric subsidiary reached a settlement agreement with parties to its 2024 general rate case, which is expected to result in ~$50M less annual revenue to the company into 2029,
CenterPoint Energy announced a settlement agreement with parties involved in its 2024 rate case for its Houston Electric business.
Houston faces dangerous cold and an impending winter storm on Martin Luther King Day. Despite wintry outlook, MLK Day celebrations should go on as scheduled.
CenterPoint Energy said Jan. 22 it successfully maintained normal electric service throughout extreme weather during Winter Storm Enzo for roughly 99 percent of its Greater Houston area customers. “With Winter Storm Enzo now behind us,