Still seething from days of Pepco letting you linger in the hot, cramped dark because of the power outage caused by the June 29 derecho? Here’s an online poll just for you.

The District’s Office of the People’s Counsel is the latest outfit taking the pulse of how D.C. residents feel about Pepco, especially in the wake of its performance—widely acknowledged to be lackluster—after the June 29 storm that left some people without power for nearly a week. While the lights and air conditioning were out, temperatures and humidity soared, making it especially difficult for some to endure the weather without air conditioning.

The OPC poll asks the typical questions raised when the conversation turns toward Pepco: Power loss, length of outages, Pepco’s response time and customer service performance. Recent polls conducted by the Post and WTOP gave Pepco very troubling marks, with the Post finding that Pepco is even more unpopular than Mayor Vince Gray’s administration. Meanwhile, WTOP found that if Pepco’s D.C. customers had the opportunity to switch to a different utility like Dominion Virginia Power, 42 percent would.

But the OPC questionnaire isn’t just for post-storm grousing. It also asks participants to weigh in on whether the District’s power lines should be moved underground. That would be a very costly process—as much as $6 billion—but it would greatly reduce the number and duration of power outages. Still, most who answered the Post’s Pepco survey were resistant to the notion of paying more on their monthly bills for that modernization.