)octors say ’77 legislature ;ws lidn’t help insurance costs i nc; oaa i i /-vi_iwin WEDNESDAY. JUNE 1, 1977 rciye o Unfinished Furniture Center Do It Yourself & Save ^ “Free Stain Classes” 314 N. Main “Downtown” Bryan 822-7052 lards a peace office, itral John HI intment ofspej attorney qj rithout havim Iriscoe PACK’S PLASTER & CERAMICS Hours: Tues., Wed., Thurs. 1 p.m.-9 p.m. Saturday 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Sunday 2 p.m.-5 p.m. EM 2233, Old Wheelock Rd. 823-396! PRINTING & OFFICE SUPPLIES 707 TEXAS AVE., COLLEGE STATION OPEN 8<30-5>30 MON-SAT 846-5794 WE DO COPY WORK United Press International iUSTIN — Doctors complained lerday that the 1977 legislature inot do enough to alleviate rising Ipractice insurance costs. A compromise malpractice bill in approval, 141-1 House, and. Senate, only minutes before Monday midnight deadline that dthe 140-day session. Texas Medical Association ident, Dr. John M. Smith of Antonio, said doctors remain Jitisfied. he bill has some good ovisions but many important Indments by the Texas Senate I recommendations of the state’s malpractice study commission are ignored in the bill,” Smith said. The legislation, which now goes to the governor, calls for a $500, (X)0 ceiling on awards for non-medical losses to patients injured by mal practice. The compromise drawn up by Rep. Tom Uher, (D-Bay City), dis carded a provision senators in cluded in their bill to limit awards for pain and suffering in malpractice cases to $100,000. Uher also dropped Senate provisions reducing the size of mal practice awards if the patient re ceived compensation from other sources such as health insurance and allowing doctors to pay mal practice judgments in installments. “With many important provisions left out, the bill will not do an adequate job attacking the medical malpractice insurance crisis, ” Smith said. Sen. Ray Farabee, (D-Wichita Falls), Senate sponsor of doctor- backed malpractice legislation, re fused to offer the compromise bill to senators. Sen. Don Adams, (D-Jasper), won Senate approval of the mea sure, saying “I think it is going to leave this state better than it is to day.” Adams said he believes the corn- zed the lales :ive in histoiv id his nameii for the failure tility taxes. ial district judge Ithy Baytown i the motion ontractoraud i order under ession of (lie Briscoe s priorities nacted by legislature United Press International AUSTIN — Gov. Dolph Briscoe id yesterday the 1977 Texas Legis- re, which adjourned Monday, roved legislation dealing with three of his top four priorities. The governor said he had listed public education, public health, transportation and crime control as his four major priorities when he ad- lexico constructs npeline to U.S. letrik | United Press International the federal ? EXIC0 f ITY ~ P^roleos j it Kicanos, the state petroleum . J ^ liopoly, will build a 746-mile-long „ on „ r ispipenne in order to boost exports 11 t0CanCer the United States. In making the announcement of i$970 million project, Pemex di- lor general Jorge Diaz Serrano B construction of the pipeline lid begin soon and that it would e two years to complete, ne Center ; as should start flowing to the bbean and I. by 1979, he said, hurricane \y e hope to export one bil ion > coas t f° r ic feet daily by 1979, when the : stage of the pipeline will be Bipleted,” Diaz Serrano said at a |'S conference. nd that’s not all, by the end of administration in 1982, this fig- should double,” he said, iaz Serrano said that at current es this operation should give ico $2.5 million in foreign earn- every day by 1982. he 48-inch diameter pipeline originate in the nation’s richest lllelds, the Tabasco-Chiapas zone joutheastern Mexico, and follow a ite close to the Gulf of Mexico il reaching Reynosa, across the der from McAllen, Tex. From there and from an inter- Jdiate point in Tampico, on the If coast, several lines will be con ing mantis, ig efforts of had killed ummed up lion. t ik,” an urv - reporting diller filed t rayed him ctly on two o whether nected with Monterrey and various U.S. border cities, he said. “We have already contacted sev eral U.S. firms to discuss purchase and distribution of the fuel,” Diaz Serrano said. “The idea to build the pipeline, which will be constructed with foreign capital, originated after gas production in that area surpassed our early estimates, plus the discov ery of new deposits,” the official said. Original estimates called for 1,000 to 1,200 cubic feet for each barrel of crude. “However we have found new wells which produce up to 7,000 cubic feet per barrel,” he said. Most of this gas is used in pet rochemical plants but a great deal of it is simply burned off, Diaz Serrano outlined. “We no longer want to continue burning the gas. Because of this, we have postponed drilling where huge amounts of gas have been found.” Until last year, Mexico bought gas from the U.S. But early this year, it sold large quantities to the U.S. be cause of shortages caused by a harsh winter. Mexico’s proven oil reserves sur pass 11 billion barrels, but potential resources call for more than 60 bil lion. promise legislation will mitigate against rising costs of malpractice insurance for doctors without damaging the rights of patients who sue over doctors’ negligent treat ment. Adams was the third sponsor of the malpractice bill in the Senate. Sen. A. R. Schwartz, (D- Galveston), originally sponsored a House-passed malpractice bill but disowned the measure after doctors won changes considered unaccept able by trial lawyers. Bitter disputes between doctors and trial lawyers marked the months of deliberations over mal practice legislation and came close to stopping any legislation. dressed the legislature in January. “I did not envision that my rec ommendations on any of these sub jects would be adopted to the letter. But I can say with appreciation that three out of four of these top priorities I submitted have been substantially enacted into law,” he said. Briscoe noted the legislature ap proved a medical malpractice bill which dealt with a major public health problem, approved a $528 million highway funding bill to aid transportation, and adopted “the most comprehensive criminal justice and rehabilitation program ever enacted. He disputed criticism that the lawmakers jeopardized the public school finance bill by allocating $528 million to highways before consider ing education funding. “The issue has not been whether we should have good highways or good schools,” he said. “The true issue is whether Texas state govern ment is responsible and farsighted enough to maintain a system of qual ity public education and a system of quality public transportation, both of which are vital to our standard of living and our future prosperity. ” Briscoe also noted this was the third consecutive session in which the legislature has not raised state taxes. “I know of no other state in the union which has compiled a record equal to that, and I am going to do my part to keep the record going,” he said. Get into some great pants! 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