Page 2-Friday, February 9, 1979-The Michigan Doily ATTORNEY GENERAL QUESTIONS PROPOSED HIKE: State disputes Edison rate plan By MARY FARANSKI The Detroit Edison Company in December requested from the Mich- igan Public Service Commission (MPSC) a $221 million rate hike to be spread over the next two years. Now the company may spend as much as half that time in court because Attorney General Frank Kelley has intervened in the request. According to attorney Al Ernst, who works in the Attorney General's office, Detroit Edison customers "pay higher rates nationally than most customers, excluding the Eastern seaboard." New Yorkers have the highest rates, and businesses are leaving the area because of high-bills. Kelley does not want Detroit in the same situation, ac- cording to Ernst. ACCORDING TO a news release from the Attorney General's office, the proposed rate increase "would boost the utility bill for a typical customer (using 500 kilowatt hours of electricity per month) by $2.98." It would raise the, cost of electricity from approximately 5 cents to about 5% cents per kilowatt hour. Consumers Powej, which serves the rest of the lower peninsula; charges just under 4 cents per kilowatt hour. Detroit Edison serves metropolitan Detroit and the Thumb area, extending as far west as Ann Arbor and as far south as the Ohio border. While covering about 13 per cent of Michigan's land area, it serves about one-half of Michigan's population and energy consumption. PUBLIC HEARINGS onthe rate in- crease will begin Feb. 13 at Detroit's City-County Building. The MPSC will preside over another set of hearings in Lansing, which are scheduled to begin Feb. 20. At these hearings, Edison will present evidence. and have witnesses testify as to the necessity of the rate in- crease. Then Kelley and other opponen- ts of the rate hike will present their side to the MPSC. Those hearings could last as long as a year, according to Hugh Anderson, who will represent Kelley in the case. Anderson said that Edison has for dovec Pay fcbkuakgj 14 fioSh tQowehrg ca~ o eg Souh htus supply yours Poweim. 93ou spply the Vovc. several years requested new increases two months after their previous request was approved, although approval was usually granted for only a fraction of the original request. Three months ago, the MPSC granted Edisoi an $87 million increase. Fred Sullivan of Detroit Edison said his company can only ask for $166 million under President Carter's wage and price guidelines, but if the guidelines expire, Edison wants the whole $221 million. EDISON CLAIMS it needs the extra income to cover the rising cost of operation maintenance, to increase the rate of return on its common equity stock, and to finance several construc- tion projects near Port Huron. One project under construciton called Greenwood 1, is an oil-generated plant. "We've contended for several years now that the plant should not operate because oil is not an economical source of energy," said Anderson. Oil prices have quadrupled since con- struction began. Greenwoods 2 and 3 will be nuclear generating plants, which Anderson also said he sees as unnecessary. Daily Official Bulletin Friday, February 9, 1979 Daily Calendar Guild House: Soup and Sandwich, 75 luncheon, Brother David Steindl-Rast, Benedictine Monk, "Buddhism, Hinduism and Christianity," 802 Monroe, noon; Art and Music in a Westerd Monastery, Canterbury Loft, 332S. State, 8p.m. Ctr. Western Europen Studies: Samuel Barnes; "Personal Satisfaction and Political Protest in Con temporary Western Democracies," Conf. Rm League, noon. Ctr. South/Southeast Asian Studies: Linda Lim, "The New Export Economy: Industrial Free Trade Zones in East and Southeast Asia," Commons Rm., Lane, noon. Physics/Astronomy: B. Savit, "Duality in Field Theory and Statistical Systems," 2038 Randall, 2 p.m. Humanities/College of Engineering: Howard P. Segal, "Technological Utopianism Within American Cultre," 1047 E. Eng., 3 p.m. Environmental Science & Technology: Ben van Vliet, "The Use of Synthetic Polymeric Absorbent for Trace Organic Removal in Aqueous Phase," 185 Eng., IA, 3:30 p.m. Psychology: Oscar Barbarin, "Community Psychology: Returning to Basics," 447 Mason Hall, 4 p.m. SUMMER PLACEMENT 3200 SAB-763-4117 Announcements: U.S/ Dept. Labor, Washington. Summer Intern Program for juniors/senior, and up. Required majors, ind. hygiene/envirohimental health chemistry, biology, economics., Further details available. Defense Logistics Agency, Cleveland, Ohio. Aci countant, Financial Analyst, Computer Specialist and Ind. Engr. positions open in Cleveland, Grand Rapids, Detroit. Further details available. U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, Ill. Summer Intern Program in Minnesota for Engr. Technician GS-5 Further details available. Commodity Futures Trading Commission, Washington, D.C. Opening for Management Analyst or Program Analyst GS-5 or 7. Further details available. U.S. Dept. Interior, Fish & Wildlife Div., Washington, D.C. Opening in field of Biological Science (Environmental Education). Further details available. U.S. Dept. Agri. Food & Nutrition Service, Washington, D.C. GS-9. Statistician opening. Further details available. Office of Personnel Management, Washington, D.C. GS-7 position. Students in economics, publi adriin., or law. Further details available. Also, fields of human resource development or education technology. Ypsilanti 115 W. Michigan 463-0225 ,Iar 1 1 FLOWERS Ann Arbor 2745 Plymouth Rd 769=-250 _ .. _ _. _____. I Student Newspaper at The University of Michigan 1I --r--------- WRITE YOUR AD HERE! ----------- 1 1 1 I A s 4 1417 34 .0 .17.0 10 Iieseini I ii 1- - -- -- CLI AND MAIL TODAY!----u--------jnn1 I USE THIS HANDY CHART TO QUICKLY ARRIVE AT AD COSTI Words 1 .2 3 4 53add. 0-14 1.70 3.40 4.60 . 5.80. 7.00 1.00 Pleeindicate 15-21 2.55 5.10 6.90 8.70 10.50 1.50 wherethisad 22-28 3.40 6.80 9.20 11.60 14.00 2.00 forrent 29-35 4.25 8.50 11.50 14.50 17.50 2.50 hep wantale 36-42 5.10 10.20 13.80 17.40 21.00 3.00 ero"a s 43-49 6.80 11.90 16.10 20.30 24.50 3.50 etc. Seven words per line. Each group of characters counts as one word. Hyphenated words over 5 characters count as two words-This includes telephone numbers. ri University of Michigan Alumnus THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXIX, No. 109 Friday, February 9, 1979 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage is paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. 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