Similar Articles

NEW FOR WEDNESDAY: County To Seek Waiver For Traffic Light At Troubled Spot

SNOW HILL -- Following a heated meeting between the State Highway Admi...READ MORE

NEW FOR FRIDAY: Wacky Crime Stories From 2012

OCEAN CITY -- Throughout the course of each year, hundreds of criminal...READ MORE

Accident Claims Life Of Local Man

BERLIN -- A local man was killed Wednesday in a two-vehicle accident a...READ MORE

Wicomico Audit Confirms Expenses Below Budget

SALISBURY – Wicomico County’s annual audit this year revea...READ MORE

Compromise Reached To Protect Atlantic Menhaden

OCEAN CITY -- Federal fisheries management officials last week took an...READ MORE

Downtown Group Keeps Inlet Lights Goal In Sight

OCEAN CITY – Although the holiday season will come to an end nex...READ MORE

Downtown Restaurant Building Demolition Near

OCEAN CITY – The Fat Daddy’s restaurant building on S. Bal...READ MORE

Some Salisbury Boards Struggling With Participation

SALISBURY -- A few commissions in Salisbury have had trouble operating...READ MORE

Spotlight Put On ‘Silent Giants’ At OC Open House

OCEAN CITY -- Residents and visitors are invited to start off the New ...READ MORE

Berlin In Process Of Locating New Power Agreement

4/27/2007 | By Staff Writer

BERLIN - While instructing staff to seek a long-term power agreement, expected to reduce ratepayers' electric bills, the Berlin Mayor and Council faced a large bill of their own for electric sale legal fees this week.

The council approved payment of $152,000 in fees from utility sale law firm Thompson Coburn.

'This is only through February,' said town administrator Linda Bambary.

The bill for the remainder of the deferred legal fees, incurred in March and the first half of April, has not arrived yet, she said.

Council member Dean Burrell asked if the firm had been notified to stop working on the case.

'It stopped as of the minute we sent the letter,' Mayor Tom Cardinale said.

The town had already paid $34,000 to Thompson Coburn, but the majority of the fees were to be deferred until settlement of the sale of the electric utility.

The town council pulled the plug on both deals two weeks ago after Old Dominion Electric Cooperative exercised their option to pull out over environmental issues at the power plant property. The sale of the distribution network to Choptank Electric Cooperative was halted because elected officials felt that the townspeople had not approved that sale alone.

Overall, Berlin has paid $185,000 in legal fees, and an estimated total of $300,000 in all fees, including appraisals, consultants, and legal, through February. Bambary said she expects the final Thompson Coburn legal fees bill to arrive at any time.

The cost of the abortive sale 'would be expensed to the electric budget unless the council wanted to take it out of the general fund,' Bambary said.

Council member Paula Lynch said that would be addressed during the upcoming budget process.

'I think we're going to need to see where we stand,' Lynch said.

With the sale of the electric system dead, the town is looking for a long-term power agreement. The request for proposals was sent out this week to 30 power vendors, after the town council authorized the action Monday night.

'The BUC (Berlin Utility Commission) will give you a not-to-exceed number,' Lynch said.

Bambary and Finance Director Joe Davis will have some latitude to accept a deal without consulting the council, Bambary said, because of the time sensitive nature of price quotes. The town council will make the decision if the price is above a certain amount.

Bambary said she could not predict possible rates of savings for ratepayers.

 

There are no comments.

Leave a comment

Please complete all required fields.
Name*
Email
Comment*

Submit