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From our January 18, 2001,
edition.
New
company to take over TXU gas services
Roger
Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
More
than 5,000 natural gas consumers in the lower Panhandle will be dealing
with a new utility in just a few months.
TXU
Gas announced last week that it will sell approximately 250 miles of
pipeline as well as distribution facilities serving Clarendon, Hedley,
Lelia Lake, Memphis, Estelline, Dodson, Newlin, Samnorwood, Wellington,
and Paducah to G&L Utilities.
According
to TXU spokesman Doug Hill, the gas company has been looking at this sale
since last summer.
“Management
is continuously looking at our assets.” Hill said. “We’re glad
someone locally is looking at this service. They should be able to provide
better service for local people.”
G&L
Utility Services, Inc., is owned by Greenbelt Electric Cooperative, Inc.,
in Wellington and Lighthouse Electric Cooperative, Inc., in Floydada.
Greenbelt
manager of member services Brent Wheeler said G&L may or may not be
the final name of the new company, and the location of the new company’s
headquarters hasn’t been determined.
“We’re
mainly concerned about keeping local jobs and local ownership of the gas
services,” he said.
Wheeler
notes last year’s sale of GTE’s phone exchanges to Valor Telecom and
the current TXU sell off as a sign large corporations are losing interest
in small towns.
“It’s
sad that the bigger companies don’t seem to want these rural areas,”
Wheeler said.
Neither
Greenbelt nor Lighthouse has experience in natural gas distribution, but
Wheeler thinks the rural electric cooperatives will do a better job of
providing service to small towns.
“We
hope to respond quicker to the needs of the people,” he said. “And the
good news is you’ll have someone local you can yell at.”
In
addition to having local employees and an office in nearby Wellington,
Greenbelt Electric is run by a board of directors. Stan Shelton from
Clarendon sits on that board, Wheeler said.
“We’ve
provided the rural areas around most of these towns with electric
distribution service for over 50 years,” Greenbelt Electric general
manager Stan McLendon said in a TXU press release. “We are grateful for
the opportunity to be of service to our neighbors. We plan to have
qualified, dedicated employees in or near all the communities to provide
dependable, personal service.”
TXU
employees affected by the sale will have the opportunity to continue
employment with TXU or may be offered positions with the purchasing
company.
The
gas company says it will work with G&L Utilities over the winter and
longer if necessary to provide a smooth transition and continued reliable
service to customers.
“The
sale will be in the best interests of consumers,” Hill said.
TXU
is also selling distribution facilities and 100 miles of pipeline serving
communities in the San Angelo area to West Texas Gas.
Hill
said the sale is tentatively scheduled to be completed by March 31, 2001,
but Wheeler said the new company may not have possession until April or
May.
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