Three small power utilities, born at a time when coal mines were pulling up stakes, are asking the Public Service Commission to place them under the same corporate umbrella with authority to increase overall customer rates by 12 percent.
Under the proposal, West Virginia Utility would be the single name of the new entity, once Black Diamond Power in Sophia, Elk Power in Clay, and Union Power in Mullens are formally merged, says the firm’s president, David Musser, a grandson of the founder.
Each of the three electric utilities now operating separately has about 1,200 customers.
West Virginia Utility has always overseen the engineering, auditing, payroll and other corporate functions for the three, Musser explained.
Read more in tomorrow's edition of The Register-Herald.
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Small power firms seek to merge, raise rates
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