Page 12-Saturday, July 12, 1980-The Michigan Daily Unrelenting heat wave brings record-breaking utility demands A By The Associated Press The unrelenting heat wave in the South, Southwest and Midwest is bringing record-breaking electricity demands to utilities, and may bring record-breaking bills to consumers who have to pay for the power. "Each day we go on, the air con- ditioners stay on longer," said Neil Nelson, construction manager for the Northern States Power Co. in Sioux Falls, S.D. "Everybody wants to keep cool." UTILITY OFFICIALS contacted in an Associated Press survey yesterday said they were managing to meet the demand for electricity without problems so far. Charles Kelly, director of corporate communications for the Arkansas Power and Light Co., said a new nuclear power plant has helped produce the record amounts of electricity needed. "You begin to be a little more nervous the longer it goes on," said Kelly, "but we don't anticipate any problems." An unofficial tally by the AP, com- piled from local reports, indicates more than 300 people in 14 states have died of heat-related causes during the heat wave, now in its 20th day in some areas. THE TOLL includes 87 deaths in Texas, 83 in Arkansas, 33 in Oklahoma, 27 in Tennessee, 17 in Missouri, 14 in Mississippi, 11 each in Kansas and Georgia, 10 in Missouri, 14 in Mississip- pi, 11 each in Kansas and Georgia, 10 in Illinois, five in Louisiana, four in Alabama, two each in Kentucky and Indiana and one in Nebraska. In Dallas, the temperature has top- ped the 100-degree mark every day sin- ce June 23, with the thermometer hit- ting an average of 105 degrees most days. In contrast, the average tem- perature in the period from June 23 to July 6, 1979, was 97 degrees. "Some of the bills are as high as 94 per cent greater than the same billing period of 1979," said Jim Lawrence of the Dallas Power and Light Co. HE ADDED, however: "You have to keep in mind that last summer was ex- tremely cool for Dallas and we had a 9.7 per cent rate increase last October." Another Dallas Power spokesman, Don Wilson, said usage set an all-time record of 2.29 million kilowatts. Ed Crosby of the Alabama Power Co. said, "Homeowners can expect high bills, but there's no way to estimate a percentage or money figure yet." He said demand reached a record 6,760 megawatts of electricity Thursday, breaking a 1978 mark of 6,670 megawat- ts. "We are coping," he said. Kelly said Arkansas Power and Light will try to help customers. The number of "cooling hours" during which customers are using air conditioners is 200 per cent more this year than it was last year, he said, adding: "We'll have many people getting well over $200 monthly bills. Certainly we'll try to cushion the impact." The utility is ad- vertising a special plan that allows customers to average payments over an entire year. I 6 0 .0 Sizing up the situation At Maintenance man Dale Hamilton peers down a stretch of street car track in New Orleans to see if it is straight and level. The old streetcars have survived the switch to buses and still operate along St. Charles Ave. Gas venting ends at Pa. nuclear facility HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP)-The gas were released from the crippled remaining radioactive krypton gas was nuclear plant during the 14-day purge. vented from the Three Mile Island Arnold said about 40 curies were nuclear plant yesterday, completing released during the final hours' of the the first major step in cleaning up the purge. The total release was about facility since it was contaminated by 14,000 curies less than the 50,000 an- the nation's worst commercial nuclear ticipated. He said the higher estimate power accident 15 months ago. was made initially because safety Meanwhile, an, anti-nuclear judgments were at stake. coalition said it would continue its legal "The 43,000 figure was more con- action against the Nuclear Regulatory sistent with what we expected from Commission for allowing the venting to what we think happened," he said, take place. referring to the March 28, 1979 accident "AT 9:30 A.M. WE terminated the that crippled the plant. venting process," said Robert Arnold, A brief manned entry into the dank, senior vice president of the radiation-drenched containment Metropolitan Edison Co. building is scheduled within a month, About 43,000 curies of the radioactive Arnold siid.-* 6 6 I