Authors: Arthur Hailey
Tags: #Industries, #Technology & Engineering, #Law, #Mystery & Detective, #Science, #Energy, #Public Utilities, #General, #Fiction - General, #Power Resources, #Literary Criticism, #Energy Industries, #English; Irish; Scottish; Welsh, #Fiction, #Non-Classifiable, #Business & Economics, #European
sure what, he added, "I don't see why you should go on blaming yourselves
for circumstances . . ."
A glance from Luther and a, "Please, Mr. Goldman," silenced him. Nim
realized what be should have known instinctively: There was nothing else to
say; the arguments had been marshaled before, and emphatically rejected.
There was no way, never had been, in which these two could be relieved of
one iota of the burden they carried.
"Henrietta's right" Luther said. "I do think the same way she does. Both of
us will take the guilt with us to our graves."
His wife added, "So you see what I mean when I say that whatever we
do-including working to pay for a van for Karen-iS really nothing."
"It isn't nothing," Nim said. "Whatever else is true, it's a whole lot more
than that."
They walked from the apartment lobby to the street outside. Nim's car was
parked a few yards away.
"T'hank you for telling me what you did," he said. "I'll try to do
something about the van, just as soon as I can."
As Nim bad come to expect, some verse from Karen arrived two days later.
When young Did you ever run on sidewalks, Playing the game Of
avoiding cracks? Or, much later, Straddle hairlines mentally And
strut vicarious tightropes, Dreading, yet perversely courting,
Disaster from a fall?
"Disaster" did I say? An aberrant word! For there are other falls
and penalties Not wholly catastrophic, But cushioned by largesse Of
joy and glory. Filling in love is one.
Yet wisdom cautions: A fall is a fall With aftermaths of hurt and
pain Only delayed, not circumvented.
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Tish, tosh! Away with wisdomi Hooray for crazy paving, tightropes,
hairlinesl Right now, who's wise, or wants to be? Not 1. Are you?
Ile subject was Tunipah.
"Talking to the Governor of this state about anything," J. Eric Humphrey
declared in his clipped Bostonian accent, "has about the same effect as
putting one's band into a pail of water. As soon as you take the hand
out, the water is exactly the way it was before, as if the hand had never
been there."
"Except," Ray Paulsen pointed out, "your hand would be wet."
"Clammy," the chairman corrected.
"I warned you," Teresa Van Buren said. "I warned you right after the
blackout two months ago that public memory is short, that people
-including politicians-would forget the power shortage and the reasons."
"Memory isn't the Governor's problem," Oscar O'Brien assured her. The
general counsel had been with Eric Humphrey during recent sessions at the
state capitol, where proposals for new generating plants -including
Tunipah-had been discussed. He went on, "There's only one trouble with
our Governor: He wants to be President of the United States. He wants it
so bad, he can taste it."
Nim Goldman said, "Who knows? He might make a good president."
"He might at that," O'Brien conceded. "In the meantime, th ' ough,
California is rudderless, stuck with a head of state who won't take
stands or band down decisions. Not if they're likely to offend a single
national voter."
"Allowing for slight exaggeration," Eric Humphrey said, "that is the
essence of our problem."
"Furthermore," O'Brien added, blowing cigar smoke, "the same thing
applies-for similar if different reasons-to every other public figure in
Sacramento."
The five of them were at Golden State Power & Light headquarters, in the
chairman's office suite, seated informally in the lounge area.
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In less than two weeks public hearings on the proposed coal-burning,
high-capacity generating plant at Tunipah would begin. And while the
project was vital to California-a viewpoint agreed to privately by the
Governor, his aides and senior legislators-for political reasons none would
lend public support to the Tunipah plan. The utility, despite strong
opposition forces, must "go it alone."
Something else the Governor bad rejected was GSP & L's plea that the
several regulatory agencies which would be involved with licensing Tunipah
should hold joint hearings because of urgency. Instead, regular procedures
would take their course. It meant a long, exhausting series of submissions
and argument before four separate government bodies, each concerned with a
differing aspect, though often overlapping.
Teresa Van Buren asked, "Is the Governor, or anyone else, likely to have a
change of heart?"
"Only if the bastards see an advantage to themselves," Ray Paulsen growled.
"And they won't." Paulsen bad grown increasingly bitter of late about the
frustrating delays in having plans approved. As the executive in charge of
power supply, Paulsen would have the unpopular job of initiating power cuts
when they became needed in the future.
"Ray's right," O'Brien acknowledged. "We all know bow the Sacramento gang
left us holding the bag on nuclear, admitting-off the rccord-the need for
nuclear plants, but without the guts to say so out loud."
"Well," Eric Humphrey said incisively, "whether we like that attitude or
despise it, the same is true again. Now about the Tunipah hearings. I have
some thoughts to share with you. I want our own participation in those
hearings to be of the highest caliber. Our presentation must be factual,
reasoned, calm and dignified. Under cross-examination the responses of all
our representatives must be the same, with emphasis on courtesy and
patience. As part of their tactics, the opposition will try to provoke us.
We must resist that provocation and I want all our people briefed to that
effect."
"It will be done," Oscar O'Brien said.
Ray Paulsen regarded Nim somberly. "Remember that applies to you.,,
Nim grimaced. "I'm already practicing restraint, Ray-rigbt now."
Neither had forgotten their clash at the management meeting where Nim and
Van Buren favored a hard-line public airing of the utility's problems,
Paulsen and a majority of others the reverse. judging by the chairman's
instructions, the "moderate line" was still in effect.
"Do you still believe, Oscar," Eric Humphrey asked, "that it is necessary
for me, personally, to appear at those hearings?"
O'Brien nodded. "Absolutely yes."
Behind the question, obviously, was Humphrey's wish to avoid public
attention. During the past ten days there had been two more bombings at GSP
& L installations, none causing major damage but a reminder of
143
the continuing danger to the utility and its personnel. Only yesterday a
warning, telephoned to a radio station, declared that "more Golden State
Piss & Lickspittle management criminals will shortly pay the people's
penalty for their misdeeds."
O'Brien added, "I promise it will be a brief appearance, Eric, but we
need you on the record."
The chairman sighed. "Very well."
Nim thought with wry humor: As usual, the low-profile strategy would not
apply to him. At the upcoming hearings Nim would appear as a key witness
and, while others from the utility would testify on technical matters,
Nim would present the broad sweep of the Tunipab project. Oscar O'Brien
would lead the witnesses through interrogation.
Nim and O'Brien already had had several rehearsals in which Ray Paulsen
shared.
During their work with O'Brien, Paulsen and Nim bad suppressed their
normal antagonism and at moments had come close to amiability.
Taking advantage of this, Nim raised with Paulsen the subject of a used
van for Karen Sloan because transportation was a subordinate department
under Power Supply.
To Nim's surprise, Paulsen was interested and helpful. Within fortyeight
hours of their conversation, be bad located a suitable van which would
shortly be available for sale. More than that, Ray Paulsen was personally
designing some modifications. They would facilitate loading Karen's
wheelchair into the van and, once inside, locking it in place. Karen
telephoned Nim to say that a GSP & L mecbanic had visited her to measure
her chair and check on electrical connections.
"One of the best things that's ever happened to me," Karen told Nim
during their phone talk, "was your seeing that red circle on the map that
day and afterwards coming here. Speaking of that, when are you coming
again, dear Nimrod? Soon, I hope." He had promised he would. Later, Nim
bad phoned Karen's parents, Luther and Henrietta, who were delighted
about the van and were now arranging a bank loan to cover most of its
cost.
Oscar O'Brien's voice brought Nim back to the present. "I presume all of
you realize how long this entire process concerning Tunipah is likely to
take."
Paulsen said gloomily, "Too damn long!"
Van Buren inquired, "What's your best estimate, Oscar?"
"Assuming we are successful at the various sets of hearings, and allowing
for delaying court actions subsequently, which our opponents are certain
to resort to-I'd say six to seven years." The general counsel shuffled
papers. "You may also be interested in costs. My department estimates
that our own costs-just to seek the license to build, and whether we win
or lose-will be five and a half million dollars. Environmental studies
will cost a few million more, and we won't have turned a spade until
construction is fully licensed."
144
"Let us make sure, Tess," Eric Humphrey told the p.r. director, "that
that information becomes as widely known as possible."
"I'll try," Van Buren said. "Though I can't guarantee that many outside
this room will care."
"They'll care when the lights go out," Humphrey snapped. "All right, I
want to review progress, if any, on our other applicationsDevil's Gate
pumped storage and Fincastle geothermal."
"'If any' is right," O'Brien observed. He reported that so far only the
earliest skirmishes through bureaucratic jungles had been accomplished.
Countless others lay ahead. Meanwhile, massive opposition to Devil's Gate
and Fincastle was growing . . .
Listening, Nim experienced a surge of anger at the cumbrous, inefficient
system and the utility's own faintheartedness in failing to attack it
strongly. Nim knew be would have trouble at the Tunipah bearings. Trouble
in exercising restraint, difficulty in maintaining patience, a reluctance
to curb his own harsh words which could speak the truth forthrightly.
8
J. Eric Humphrey sat red-faced and uncomfortable in the elevated, hard-
backed witness chair. He had been there half a day-already several hours
longer than the "brief appearance" Oscar O'Brien had promised him.
Three feet away, in the courtroom-like setting, Davey Birdsong stood
facing the witness and towering over him. Birdsong swayed slightly as be
transferred his formidable weight from his heels to the balls of his
feet, then back, forward, back again. "Since you must be hard of hearing,
I'll repeat my question. How much do you get paid each year?"
Humphrey, who had hesitated when the question was first posed, glanced
at O'Brien, seated at counsel's table. The lawyer gave the slightest of