i features Battalion/Page 48 April 8,1982 Millionaire hosts Customers outraged by payments benefit to support murder defendant Utilities having to repay bonds United Press International FORT WORTH — It had all the trappings of a Texas-style millionaire’s reception — about 50 people in their best Finery motoring up the curving drive way to the front door of a posh mansion — called in the name of raising funds for a worthy cause. The difference is the money raised at the $100-a-person be nefit will help pay the legal fees of a murder defendant. Karen and Cullen Davis sponsored the event Wednesday night on behalf of their new friend, Pamela Fielder, 36, who faces trial April 19 on charges of shooting her husband five times last July. Davis, a multimillionaire businessman, is acquainted with the cost of defense lawyers. He was cleared of charges in trials in 1977 and 1979 stemming from the shooting deaths of his 12- year-old stepdaughter and estranged wife’s boyfriend, and an alleged conspiracy to kill a judge. The Davises met Fielder through their church affiliation in October. The Davises and other church members have ral lied to Fielder’s side, said the Rev. Ron Davis of Bethel Temple. Although Fielder was one of the city’s pre-emiment gyneco logists, Fielder’s attorney, Don Gandy, said his client is as good as broke. Her assets were frozen in a lawsuit field by Fielder’s re latives, he said. The Davis’ hoped to raise $20,000 to pay the legal fees of attorney Richard “Racehorse’ Haynes, inviting old friends and business associates of Fielder to the reception. Haynes led the defense for Davis in his two trials. Neither Fielder nor Davis could be reached today for com ment on the fund raiser. United Press International SEATTLE — People don’t ex pect something for nothing, but they get downright angry at get ting nothing for something. Thousand? of residents of the Pacific Northwest are angry. They have been advised they will have to pay plenty for two partly built nuclear power plants that likely will never produce a kilowatt. The bill could run as high as $7 billion. The Washington Public Pow er Supply System, which uses the acronym WPPSS, is now de risively termed “Whoops” by the angry ratepayers. WPPSS, a consortium of utili ties, had the two plants barely 20 percent complete when cost overruns and soaring interest rates brought construction to a halt last June. With $2.25 billion already in vested in the plants, the 88 owm- ers — public utilities from Washington, Oregon, Idaho and Montana — decided in January to terminate the pro jects. As a result, average utility rates in Washington are ex- C ected to increase $16 a month y next January and triple by 1985. When the first increases hit, Washington customers were “I am a human being and I have helped make this country as much as anyone else has. I do not deserve to go hungry or eat dog food because of utility policies.” — 86- year-old Zora Minnich. outraged. Meetings of public utilities commissioners, usually sparsely attended, have become crowded with chanting rate payers. “I am a human being and I have helped make this country as much as anyone else has. I do not deserve to go hungry or eat dog food because of utility J>oli- cies,” said 86-year-old Zora Min nich, who lives on $181 a month. “It’s anger and frustration that’s bringing us out,” said Gary Lintz, organizer of the protests in one county. The ratepayers’ wrath is not directed so much at the plants — WPPSS No. 4 at Hanford in east ern Washington and WPPSS No. 5 at Satsop on the west side of the state — as at the WPPSS. WPPSS’ ambitious program to build five nuclear power plants was put together in 1968. The system estimated the five plants would cost $4 billion. By 1981 the estimate had swollen to $24 billion, making it the largest public works project in history. The Bonneville Power Admi nistration, a federal power dis tribution agency, backed the first three nuclear plants. BPA was sure the power from those three reactors would be needed and agreed to buy all of it for resale to regional power cus tomers. But BPA refused to back pro jects 4 and 5, essentially leaving the 88 sponsoring utilities on their own to make good on the bonds sold to finance them. The angry customers want the termination costs eliminated from their bills. Some want their commissioners to resign. Some want their PUDs to withhold any payments on bonds issued for lants 4 and 5. Others favor de- I faulting altogi ti-million doll ether on their mul- lar bond indebted ness. WPPSS wants a controlled termination that systematically will meet all obligations. Uncon trolled termination — including the possibility of default on 4 and 5 bonds — is greatly feared by most utilities and publicul cials throughout the Norths Failure to meet all deblit the 4 and 5 projects will emit ger bond ratings forplantsl and 3 and may bring all tj struction to a halt. WPPSS must start payin|ij terest on the 4 and 5 bondsmi January. If termination mi course, the total cost of pi off all bills and all bon(is|i interest is calculated ameaibl billion over three decades, j Richard Baxendale, whom resents the participatingFll said if a utility defaults osi share of 4 and 5, it willaua tically open itself to lawmiil WPPSS as well as the87«j participating PUDs. “The ultimate underwif of those nuclear plants arts ratepayers,” said Jeffrey Wi horn, bond analyst withDreiii Corp. “If the widow namedil: Jones says, ‘Hell no, I won’t]* you have the possibility of| fault.” DUlafd’s fPrt^astef\Afl United Pres I TULIA — I to have met Ja President War timely savings or and he says he < Vith then-Gr seagan. But t memorat life of the 73 newsman. (f Davis, who newspapers in misses new spring coordinates Worth, Welli Falls, and Holli eight or 10 toi f M' 25 % to 40 % o# T1 W GROUP I The unconstructed jacket and solid or patterned shirts match our precisely tailored creme or rouge polyester/rayon flax skirts, 8-16. 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