Wednesday, March 30, 1988/The Battalion/Page 5 by Jon Caldara d ftOMRS, ins HM ommsymm \ BUCH FOR Lurm ST. SU case near completion ith $17 million increase STUDE ! 3 a dii in nforadu! y ■ AUSTIN (AP) — The rate-mak- t 6 p.m a ft? marathon that is the Gulf States ■tilities case appears ready to end jdertod&ftednesday with a net increase of about $ 17 million. itionsaies Food Sot jisa Dini r y at6'30p r | !he B The Texas Public Utility Commis sion took several votes in the case Buesday, leaving one decision for to day on whether the increase should Be imposed at one time or phased in. nal meeiffthe last vote was postponed until Hie commission staff could calculate pexact numbers. ay rooiti-H Kim McMurray, GSU spokesman, Jid the increase apparently wotdd »ise monthly residential bills for 1,000 kwh from the current $74.06 tp about $81. I The Beaumont-based utility, which said it was headed toward pos sible bankruptcy at the time, filed in November 1986 for a $144 million rate increase. The heart of the case as the company’s $3.1 billion in vestment in the River Bend nuclear plant in Louisiana. The commission decided earlier is year to prevent the company jer cans Pefl 302 flu® E ;• will hait idder Wording ip meeffl 3uatrode !! i from passing to customers $1.4 bil lion of those costs, but said it would give GSU another shot, at a subse- quent hearing, at proving the money was well-spent. “We think we did prove it up,” McMurray said. “We think we will be able to prove up most or all of that amount.” ' The commission’s approximate $17 million bottom line is roughly the same as proposed by PUG exam iners, although the commission and the examiners took different routes to reach it. The gross increase in an nual revenues is about $87 million, but that includes a $39.9 million emergency increase that has been in effect since last April and does not reflect a $30 million refund for fuel- cost adjustments. McMurray said the Texas in crease, plus a $92 million increase ordered in Louisiana by that state’s courts, would put GSU in an im proved financial condition. “At least in the short term we hope that this will allow us to borrow money at reasonable rates,” he said, predicting GSU would need loans in May. “Wt/ve got some fairly large bills that have to be paid then.” GSU hhsjprojected a $ 189 million shortfallior 1988. The inarathon case, longest in commission history, on Tuesday continued to produce heated differ ences among the commissioners on some issues. Commissioner Jo Campbell, who dissented on many of the Vey votes in the case, lashed out at the company Tuesday, likening its officials, on one specific issue, to “spoiled brats.” “There is a limit to what we expect ratepayers to do to keep the com pany afloat,” she said during the meeting. After the session, Campbell said, “Bankruptcy is always a serious sub ject, but I think I have tried consis tently to take the position that we can’t save the company from bank ruptcy if it’s going to be bent on spending its way there.” it ineetin? ! udget cuts affect Houston’s zoo >ed McW 1 'e only, i. Miat’sH 1 tisionsaf will w HOUSTON (AP) — The latest ictim of Houston’s budget woes is a ipular petting zoo for children that [ill have to close down by next month, officials said. Although the Discovery Zoo will be dosed this summer, it could re open in the fall if there is enough I money provided in the fiscal 1989 budget, Don Olson, Parks and Rec- :ation director, said Monday. “We are just too understaffed now to keep it open,” Olson said.“If there was any way to keep it open, I would.” About 2 million people visit the Houston Zoo each year, and about two-thirds of them go to the petting zoo, Marilyn McBirney, the Discov ery Zoo’s senior keeper, said. The city is trying to curb spending as it tries to deal with another budget shortfall. During the past three years, the petting zoo’s staff has been reduced from 18 to 11 keepers as part of other budget-trimming ef forts. Like most city departments, parks and recreations has been held well below its 1988 budget of nearly $20.2 million, and Mayor Kathy Whitmire has ordered another $567,000 cut by the end of the year. “Hey, guys...Kwik Kar is having an Easter Special! 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TX 77840 (409)696-1440 •learn about the performing arts •get involved on campus •help bring Broadway and classical artists to A&M •have fun/keep off the streets Information Sessions: Tues. April 5, 7:00 pm, 308 Rudder Wed. April 6, 7:00 pm, 510 Rudder Applications are also available in 216 MSC for more information call: Paul at 268-8682 or 845-1515 ^Memorial Student Center Opera and Performing Arts Society