The good vibrations of the evening were in the air as it was mostly all smiles, jokes and warm feelings between the two sides as they met and began their meeting.
The groups met at the co-op’s new building in Pima to solidify the agreements that replace the problematic 1946 agreement and a previous transmission agreement.
The second contract, called the Wheeling and Transmission Agreement, solidifies transmission service rates and will update Safford’s Eighth Avenue substation to incorporate a 69 kilovolt circuit breaker ring bus, among other upgrades.
Co-op President Gene Robert Larson said while he believed that the two parties had been bickering over the 1946 agreement since before the ink had even dried, the new contracts are “a great agreement for this Valley.”
Safford Mayor Ron Green expressed his gratitude to the co-op’s board of directors for working with the city to accomplish a new agreement with special thanks to Safford Engineer Dennis Delaney and Richard Kurtz of the Arizona Electric Power Cooperative.
“The thing(s) that we can do together will be good for everybody,” Green said. “It’ll make our power grid stronger here in the Valley for both Safford, Thatcher, Pima and the county.”
Delaney and Kurtz were the “architects” of the agreements and presented several different proposals before finding one that was acceptable to both sides, according to Kurtz.
Co-op General Man-ager Steve Lines echoed Green’s statements and said the utilities’ missions are to serve the residents with the best electric service they can and that the new agreements assist in providing to do so.
“We recognize each other’s territory and existence,” Lines said. “And like I say, ‘We’re interconnected electrical anyway, but now we’re interconnected where we can work together (and) plan together. . .”
Lines said that with the new contracts in place, the city and co-op are in a position to help each other with various needs, especially assistance with infrastructure and future needs.
He said people may nit pic at the details of the contracts, but there is always give and take in any kind of agreement.
“That’s what’s been accomplished here is there was give and take on both sides,” Lines said. “There was middle ground that was achieved, and now both utilities are going to benefit from it.”
Safford City Manager David Kincaid said an added benefit to the city is an expenditure savings of hundreds of thousands of dollars due to not having to build a new substation. He said Safford was budgeting for a new substation, but with the WTA in place, it will only have to upgrade its Eighth Avenue Substation.




Comments
13 comment(s)Cheech wrote on Jan 18, 2009 1:01 PM:
Chong wrote on Jan 14, 2009 5:51 PM:
Pistol Pete wrote on Jan 8, 2009 1:50 PM:
One who knows wrote on Jan 8, 2009 1:48 PM:
PimaTwo wrote on Jan 8, 2009 8:21 AM:
Why did safford shut down and clear out the power plant anyway if it was such a good thing? The cities with their lethargic overhead are always slow to respond to the price flucuations. So now they are caught with their pant's down.
And by the way you should abstain form name calling, my Pioneer Family founded the Gila Valley so what's that all about. "
TEP employee wrote on Jan 6, 2009 6:55 PM:
WTA had no bearing on this quoted lie.. it was lack of cooperation from the beneficiaries of the WTA "
John the Baptist wrote on Jan 6, 2009 6:51 PM:
PimaTwo wrote on Jan 6, 2009 12:08 PM:
Safford simply did not pay for the infrastructure in the areas they annexed, nor were they paying the going rate for the power. Can't have it both folks sorry! "
What gives wrote on Jan 5, 2009 10:59 PM:
to agree to such one sided benefit package. I guess we can't expect much from the Safford negotiating team... just look at who they were. Better luck next time. "
Mr. Creosote wrote on Jan 5, 2009 3:00 PM:
will the real who cares please stand up.. wrote on Jan 5, 2009 12:54 PM:
the real who cares wrote on Jan 5, 2009 3:13 AM:
who cares wrote on Jan 4, 2009 12:41 PM: