From Deseret News archives:
Questar fight heating up
Ball still battling over gas processing costs
Nearly two years have passed since Roger Ball, the former director of the state's Committee of Consumer Services, was fired by Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr.
But today, as Michele Beck, the new director of the utility watchdog group, meets for the first time with committee members, it is Ball they will be talking about.
Ball is continuing a fight that began nearly 10 years ago against Salt Lake-based Questar Gas Co.
At stake are tens of millions of dollars and an ongoing safety issue over new compositions of natural gas reaching Wasatch Front homes.
In the early 1990s, Questar Pipeline, a subsidiary, introduced so-called "coal-seam" natural gas into its pipeline system, a type of gas that cannot be deployed safely in homes without either special adjustments to residential furnaces and water heaters or processing of the gas at a facility to remove some carbon dioxide.
Over time, the coal-seam gas began to crowd out "oil-field" natural gas, causing a safety issue for appliances and a dilemma about who should pay to fix the problem.
Questar has maintained that the decision to build a processing plant was the best option and that customers should pick up the tab, adding that the processing costs are "just and reasonable."
"We, as much as our customers, are a beneficiary of this gas coming on our system," said Chad Jones, a spokesman for the utility. "It saves them millions every year."
During much of Ball's eight-year tenure as director, the committee fought Salt Lake-based Questar over the costs.
In 2003, the committee, which is charged by statute to protect the interests of consumers and small businesses, won a major victory in the dispute. The Utah Supreme Court reversed a state Public Service Commission order that resulted in a $29 million refund in processing costs, or about $37 to each Questar customer.
However, last year the PSC approved a new deal this time with the blessing of the consumer committee that allowed processing costs to begin again through 2008, amounting to roughly $18 million.
Ball was furious.
Now he, along with 54 other Utahns, are taking their appeal to the Utah Supreme Court, which is expected in February to hear oral arguments on the issue.
"The committee made a terrible error," Ball said. "I just totally fail to understand why they did that."
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