jligh utility costs puzzle city THE BATTALION FRIDAY, APRIL 7, 1978 Page 5 845-7! (Continued from page 1) ardell suggests that some of the •tment residents left their ther- tats on over the semester break iat the apartment managers went the apartments and turned the on. If they hadn’t had heaters jvery pipe would have frozen,” Jell says. ■dents deny having left their on. Peabody says, “Our plants e all dead when we returned a vacation, so I know it was cold ere ” Caplan says the wires to his He strip heater were still dis- Jteeted and everything was still judged when he returned from tion. e managers of the Sevilla and hivest Village apartments deny ling on the heat in their tenants tments. Ilia Apartment manager Peggy i ni is angry at city officials for jesting that apartment managers lipred their tenants’ dwellings, f nnset with the College Station Hs for saying that,” Cowgill HI have never gone into ally 's apartment without their per- ipn." Kftgill also says that apartment 7 alone would not prevent pipes ““’'‘'■breaking during freezing then “We had no broken pipes, tie had some people in every a gCowgill says. “As long as you jlome water running in the ■hey are not going to break. " greon das hq managers of the Durango and $i25Mtali ic ^ a P artments during the bil- A 39RSS period have since left their pos- ied,38RS2*|and could not be reached lor ^'“'tnent. itigue, to:ardell says the city is mystified s,3pr,32.:|tcomplaints from residents who Jhey vacated their apartments ...shut off their electric power dur- ■ billing period. “Those meters "t run unless there is current ft into them from someplace, ” " —■■"lell says. isedina 16 managers of the Sevilla and ane 8453iftvest Village apartments say ^■cently checked their units for t|in the electric heaters and for ftiring that may have occurred fthe apartments were rewired individual metering, he Southwest Village manager, Hsked that her name not be |ays no shorts or cross-wiring leen discovered in her build- Sevilla’s superintendent of ■nance, Zane Gauthier says I'Cross-wiring has been found in 'ex but no electrical shorts sheen discovered. ■Jell says the only other possi- explanation for the high bills is icreased cost of power. At the Ht 23 city council meeting Bar- ! said the fuel adjustment for the ing period increased about .2 pnt over previous months. He noted that power consumption j up 32 percent over the same |last year. College Station utility ger George Ford says that the . of the fuel adjustment for the ing period was more than the gost of the energy consumed, ango resident Caplan says, ypersonal opinion is that the city jll time Entertaining J -,001 or during £ HAPPY HOUR J today J 4-7 p.m. Station (EN APPELTJ 'ominili , * * singer/guitarist doesn’t read the meters regularly but some times they estimate the bills. Councilman Gary Halter says it all comes out the same in the end but we are all on fixed income,” Caplan says. “We cannot afford to pay these bills.” Bardell says utility employees are told to read every meter every month. “I am not going to make a blanket statement that all meters are read every month,” Bardell says. “But we instruct them to do this.” Bardell says the city also has con tracted with an independent agent from Austin Meters, Inc. to check the apartment meters. All of the meters checked so far seem to be working properly, Bardell says. Utility officials in both College Station and Bryan also say that no power blackouts, brownouts or surges occured during the billing period that might account for irregu lar meter readings. Dissatisfied residents from the Durango and Servilla apartments have sent letters to Houston televi sion newscaster Marvin Zindler. They have also discussed their high bills with Texas A&M legal counsel, however no suits have been filed. 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