Enron Mail

From:gerald.nemec@enron.com
To:harry.kingerski@enron.com
Subject:FW: Schedule For Territorial Dispute
Cc:chris.hilgert@enron.com, marchris.robinson@enron.com, t..hodge@enron.com
Bcc:chris.hilgert@enron.com, marchris.robinson@enron.com, t..hodge@enron.com
Date:Thu, 27 Sep 2001 12:41:48 -0700 (PDT)

Harry, We have been using Bill Bryant and the Katz Kutter law firm to represent ECS' interest in the territorial dispute between Gulf Power and WFEC. I forwarded your email to him and asked for his input. Attached is his input. I think his suggestion about a meeting with all parties involved is a good one. Let me know what you think.



-----Original Message-----
From: Bill Bryant <BBryant@katzlaw.com<@ENRON [mailto:IMCEANOTES-Bill+20Bryant+20+3CBBryant+40katzlaw+2Ecom+3E+40ENRON@ENRON.com]
Sent: Thursday, September 27, 2001 2:12 PM
To: Nemec, Gerald
Cc: Robinson, Marchris
Subject: Schedule For Territorial Dispute



Gerald,

See the attached schedule for Docket 010441, the Gulf/WFEC dispute.

There is no schedule yet for the Gulf rate hearing. We expect that in early
October and I will forward it to you.

You asked about the effect of intervention in the rate case on the
territorial dispute. In addressing this question it is useful to know that
the FPSC rate hearing intervention rules are very liberal (Enron can
intervene at any time) and that the rate case will not proceed rapidly. For
procedural purposes, a prompt intervention decision is not necessary.

Also, I think that Gulf has the stronger position in the territorial
dispute. Because an Enron intervention in the rate case could confuse the
staff and raise questions from WFEC, I think it best from ECS's perspective
to await a decision in the territorial dispute before petitioning for
intervention.



I've reviewed the questions in Harry Kingerski's e-mail that you forwarded.
Preliminarily, I note two corrections. First, we expect a decision in the
territorial dispute in early December, not November. Second, Harry said
that;

"Gulf proposed surcharge treatment for the capital costs of Smith
earlier this year, but eventually withdrew the application because the PPA
it was trying to get in place, whereby Southern would take ownership of the
plant and sell energy and capacity back to Gulf, drew a lot of flack".

I don't know if it matters, but Susan Clark was told that Gulf withdrew the
application because the discovery order in the docket would have required
the release of Southern Company strategic planning material that Southern
considered very confidential. Withdrawal was preferable to disclosure. (I
recognize that this may be only Gulf's "spin" on the withdrawal and they may
have withdrawn for exactly the reason Harry suggests.)

The strategic questions posed in Harry's e-mail are complex and involve more
than one Enron entity. His questions defy a prompt response, at least from
us. We suggest that it would be useful to convene a meeting in Houston,
including us and a representative from each wholly-owned and potentially
affected Enron entity. That would facilitate the development and
handicapping of a regulatory stance that is best for Enron. Susan's
experience as a Florida Commissioner for nine years (and General Counsel for
years before that) is useful in understanding the factors that inform
staff's recommendations as well as a Commissioner's decisions in this
context. (I've attached Susan's information.)

Let me know what you would like us to do.

Bill












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