Thursday, November 17,1988 The Battalion Page? 9% premium increase >as given to worker’s comp ;unes and busim iffering repair a: s. tie night in the up in Scott, ic affairs direct! in Little Rock. AUSTIN (AP) — The State Board | Insurance on Wednesday ap- oved unanimously a $700 million crease in premiums for workers’ impensation insurance in Texas. neighbors,” Job ce’lljustbesenii upward from es, AP&L spot The decision means Texas em- oyers will see an average 19 per- nt increase in workers’ compensa- m premiums when the new rates ke effect Jan. 1. Richard Geiger, a Dallas attorney ople that hadbfMpresenting the National Council of accommodaticc impensation Insurance, described e raise in premiums as a “survival crease.” “I believe the best that can be said the storm, 16,(1 >out it is it will allow the industry to kansas Power t mg on,” Geiger said. The insur- vithout power (i ice council had recommended a 5.7 percent rate increase. But a state consumer representa- Bve said the increase probably will prison said riing, only akJ force some businesses to drop work- nostly in ScottarMs’compensation. io power, he said ■ “I don’t know how Texas employ e's are going to be able to pay this dditional almost 20 percent in- a P Sf Computer-equipped taxicabs ow cut down on ‘customer theft’ Id apable ofimer- emitted radio ial bodies up to ?ars away. The ists understand iniverse. surveyor of the of covering the y, and was situ- al radio quiet f manmade ra- by act of Con- d. was completed f $850,000 and build, he said. •low,” Seielstad > determine the will do that as i, and then we dans to build tier.” the telescope, oundation and sortium of nine ding Harvard, rpkins, was e world. crease,” Kay Doughty, of the Office of Consumer Counsel, said. “A lot of employers are going to have to consider dropping their cov erage entirely,” she said. Workers’ compensation premiums have in creased 109 percent since Ian. 1, 1985. Doughty’s group had recom mended a 10.2 percent increase. The insurance board staff suggested a 6.7 percent hike. The three-member insurance board, Doughty and Geiger called on the Legislature to address prob lems in the system of compensating workers who are injured on the job. A House-Senate committee study ing the issue is scheduled Dec. 9 to send its Final report to the Legis lature, which convenes in January. Board chairman Edwin J. Smith Jr. said workers’ compensation in surance is in “a hell of a fix.” He said proposals by the staff and Office of Consumer Counsel would bankrupt some insurers, while the insurance industry’s recommended increase would ruin some busi nesses. Board member James L. Nelson said the board faced providing a sound workers’ compensation mar ket and preserving the economic well-being of businesses. “We may be near the point where meeting both of these (objectives) is impossible,” Nelson said. Doughty said a 10.2 percent in crease would have given workers’ compensation insurers a fair profit. She said internal expenses at the in surance companies are too high, and that by granting the 19 percent in crease, “I wonder if we’re not en couraging inefficient operation.” But Geiger said the insurers in Texas have lost hundreds of millions of dollars in the past few years. “What needs to be done is to get control of the system,” he said. Geiger blamed the courts for giving high awards to people injured on the job and thus driving up the cost of doing business. DALLAS (AP) — For the big-city raveler who phones for a yellow tax- cab but gets a blue one 10 minutes ate, and for the cab driver who ar- ives promptly to find no traveler, here is hope in the form of a com- juter. Rad M. Kuhlman is president of iellow Cab of Dallas Inc., one of sev- ral cab companies in the nation re- yingon computer dispatchers as the vaveof the future. “It will be terribly efficient com- ared to what we have now,” he said if the $2.5 million system to be in- italled at the first of the year. What he has now, just before unch on a Wednesday, is four peo- )le sitting at a desk answering the elephone, taking hand-written mes- ages with customer addresses, and ticking them on a conveyor belt vhich carries them to a lone dis- Mtcher at the end of the desk. The dispatcher, whose work space 'ery much resembles‘ a card table, licks up the messages and calls them mtover the cab company’s radio. es ree vn he has a lot? 1 MIT in ourses a semestti nial MIT studeit irned his first ee in three yean four more bach- le more year, duate work. attending classe Ficulty doing It rents, Yip said, elor’s degrees er science andet rical engineeritif d in nuclear eng is master’s in ® in 1986 andfit bis doctorate g this fall. y what he learnd tudied English e at Harvard, guage of hisf® guyen and W left Vietnam a retired govern id mother remaJ /o other sons ac Continued from page 1) )allas-Fort Worth Airport, the in- erim space facilities and the avail- ibility of sufficient available and af- ordable housing,” Foster said. The Las Colinas location was se- ected over three other area sites. When I see GTE, that means: Give Thanks Everybody,’ ” said Ir ving Mayor Bob Pierce, who was in- trumental in landing the headquar- :ers site. GTE joins a string of companies hat have relocated to Texas in the recent past. AMR Corp., parent of American /Airlines, moved to nearby Fort Worth about five years ago, and J.C. Penney Co. Inc. is in the process of noving its headquarters to Plano, ust north of Dallas. Both companies previously were based in New York City. M And that, Kuhlman said, is where most of his problems begin. “Anyone can own a scanner that will pick up our frequency,” he said. “So when the customer is standing on the curb waiting for a cab, about four show up.” He says it’s stealing when other cabs listen in on his radio and pick up customers who called for a yellow cab, not a purple, black, brown, blue, red or checkered one. What Kuhlman’s company will soon have is a system which will elim inate scanner eavesdropping. The system still relies on humans to answer the phone and type the address into a computer, but the ma chine takes it from there, Kuhlman said. After the telephone answerer types in the address, the computer system automatically alerts cab driv ers of the address through their own car computers. Cab drivers are constantly scan ning their portable units for the next call, and the one in the section of the city who responds first by typing in an answer is assigned the customer. Kuhlman said all employees will be trained to use the system and an ticipates no one will be replaced by it. “Right now, most of our drivers are on paid mileage (the meter is running) about 49 percent of the time,” Kuhlman said. He said cab drivers could expect to carry passengers 75 percent to 80 percent of the time, once they begin using the more-efficient computer dispatches. To R. Seriki, who drives a Yellow Cab, that means more money. “Oh, I tell you man, this is gonna be real good,” said Seriki, who moved to the country from Nigeria seven years ago. “No more are they gonna be taking our calls. I’m ex cited. I’ve been doing this two years and it gets worse and worse. “I work 16 hours a day sometimes now,” he said. “Two years ago, I worked 10. Things will be better TE The announcement also comes six days after the federal government picked a site about 30 miles south of Dallas to build the “super collider” project. The $5.4 billion high-en- ergy physics project also is expected to generate thousands of jobs. “We have worked hard to get this move to Texas,” said Gov. Bill Clem ents, who was in Seville, Spain, where he is promoting Texas busi ness and tourism but neverthless learned of the GTE decision. “Eco nomically, it’ll be a good thing for Texas, and particularly for the Met- roplex area. “It means jobs, jobs, jobs, and that’s what we’re trying to do to help our economy.” Clements traveled to Stamford twice this year to meet with Johnson, a Vernon, Texas, native and a grad uate of Texas Tech University in Lubbock. And although he said Fos ter had the final say in the selection, Johnson said he was naturally ex cited when he heard the decision. “As a matter of fact, I nearly broke into a Texas two-step,” John son said. “But in spite of my Texas upbringing, I’ve had no real part in this decision. Not many people be lieve that, and I can understand why. I’ve been accused for 25 years of trying to direct this company back to Texas.” GTE already has a significant presence in Texas. In the Dallas- Fort Worth area, GTE Corp. and GTE Southwest together employ about 4,000. GTE Southwest em ploys about 300 in Dallas and 1,800 in San Angelo. Foster said the relocation will not affect the San Angelo operation “in any significant way.” Dallas Mayor Annette Strauss said positive effects from the latest relo cation to the Dallas area will be felt statewide. o It’s a bweater feather at Shellenberger’s Hurry! Coupons good through Saturday, November 19! GUYS! *20% OFF EVERY long- sleeved sweater in stock. 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Coupon Good through November 19. shellenberger’s Fine Men s and Women s Apparel 520 University Drive East ALL MAJORS INVITED TO APPLY The Battalion Staff positions Applications available for: Assistant city editor Assistant entertainment editor Assistant news editors Assistant sports editors Reporters Reviewers Feature writers Sports writers Columnists Copy editors Photographers Cartoonists Graphic artists Illustrators Clerks Applications can be picked up in Rm. 216 Reed McDonald Due by 5 p.m. on Monday, Nov. 28 MUSIC E&BBES5 OPEN IU-F 12-9 Sun 12-5 725-B UNIVERSITY DRIVE “Behind Skaggs So McDonalds" 846-1741 in