The Michigan Daily - Friday, July 13, 1984 - Page 3 CONTROVERSIAL PLANT MAY BE COMPLETED 11 to c u c e Midland talks approach resolution Bechtel, the construction contractor for the plant. That is the same figure proposed by ABA From staff and wire reports In another development, Gov. James Blanchard Tnay bs the Cogurs proposad byvABA Consumers Power Co. made a new proposal to save said if the cost of abandoning the plant is not much the charges to be spread over 15 instead of 25 yes its beleagured Midland nuclear plant and appeared different than completing it, the project should be The cap also would not apply if the project o move closer to a plan offered by large industrial completed. But he said Consumers could be cancelled under "conditions beyond our contr customers. financially viable with or without the plant. However, the offer by the nation's 10th largest "It would be helpful to have the plant, but it's not Falahee said. utility was immediatley blasted by Assistant Attorney needed right away," Blanchard said. He said he is IF THE cancellation were beyond the compar General Hugh Anderson as even less acceptable than talking to the key players in the negotiations every control, the cost to ratepayers would be left up to earlier proposals. day, but would not reveal the content of his Public Service Commission. "I THINK we may be moving backward," he said. discussions. Overall, Anderson said, the Consumers prop .TE for ars. was '1," y's the sal "I think we are extremely close," said Consumers Vice Chairman James Falahee after he met with a coalition of critics of the project. Another meeting with the coalition was tentatively scheduled for today - the day Consumers said it would abandon the plant if no agreement is reached. CONSUMERS has already laid off 1,500 workers at the Midland construction site, and a decision to scrap the plan will mean the firing of 4,500 additional employees, including 700 Ann Arbor employees of UNDER THE company offer, customers would pay no more than $2.9 billion for a completed reactor - the same as proposed earlier by Consumers and the group of industrial ratepayers represented by the Association of Businesses Advacating Tariff Equity. But the key part of the proposal involves what would happen if the project had to be abandoned. Under the company's new offer, customers would be charged no more than $2.5 billion in that case. would mean rate hikes of between 54 percent and 85 percent, depending on whether one or two reactors of the original two-unit plant were completed. Consumers proposed delaying any consideration of the unfinished reactor's cost until one unit is done. "That is, we feel, just out of the question," Anderson said. IN ITS offer, Consumers also accepted ABATE's See TALKS, Page II Chill out This polar bear takes a dip in ice-cold water to beat the summer temperatures at the Detroit Zoo. REBECCA KNIGHT/Daily Blanchard predicts zero increase for LANSING (UPI) - Gov. James Blanchard yesterday boasted about a zero-increase 1985 budget which he said may be unique in the nation, but there was continuing confusion about the figures involved. Blanchard's budget department does project that general revenue spending for fiscal 1985 will be $11 million to $12 million under the current year level. But the legislative fiscal agencies are using somewhat different figures. "WE'RE TURNING this state around, insuring our financial recovery and insuring that the temporary tax in- crease remains temporary," Blan- chard said at a news conference called one day after lawmakers completed work on a $5.436 billion spending plan. Blanchard noted the budget provides increases of 12.2 percent for school aid and 11.2 percent for higher education. He did not mention that in both cases, spending was increased from the levels he had recommended at the insistance of Senate Republicans. The University will receive $182.1 'We're turning this state around, insuring our financial recovery and insuring that the temporary tax increase remains temporary.' - Gov. James Blanchard 985 budget year is out Sept. 30. That means the 1985 budget will represent a decrease of about $12 million. The House Fiscal Agency estimates current year spending at $5.406 billion. Budget Director Robert Naftaly said that projection does not include a $25 million supplemental appropriation which will be necessary before the year is out to cover welfare costs. ADDING THAT it raises the total to $5.431 billion, still about $5 million below the 1985 budget. Naftaly said dif- fering projections of school aid fund revenues explain the remainder of the discrepency. The Senate Fiscal Agency projects spending the year at $5.297 billion. figure does not include a recently adop- ted supplemental appropriation of $39 million, however, or the welfare sup- plemental which has not yet been adop- ted. "We still think it's a zero budget," Naftaly said. "We never said it was a minus, but we still think it's going to be a minus." million in state aid this fall - a $19 million dollar increase over last year's allocation. The state aid accounts for approximately one-half of the Univer- sity's general fund operating budget. WHILE THE budget is somewhat larger than the administration originally proposed. "It's still a zero budget," he said. "I doubt you'll find any other state in the nation that has such an achievement," he said. While there is general agreement on the size of the 1985 spending plan, the administration and the two legislative fiscal agencies differ in their estimate of current year spending. THE BUDGET Department estimates that general revenue spen- ding will total $5.448 billion before the