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Contributors
Marce Edwards is the business editor. She has been at The News Tribune for seven years and has written about technology and big businesses in the South Sound including Weyerhaeuser and Russell. Before moving to Tacoma, she worked at The Idaho Statesman in Boise. She is a Northwest native who likes to garden and refuses to use an umbrella. She lives in Tacoma with her husband and two kids.
C.R. Roberts is a Tacoma native. Before joining The News Tribune, he worked as a freelance writer and part-time cowhand on a cattle ranch in Northern Idaho. He writes about small business, personal finance and other business issues.
John Gillie writes about the aerospace and airline industries, commercial development and consumer issues. During his 30-year-tenure at The News Tribune he has covered issues as diverse as the Native American fishing rights disputes, crime and the courts, the wood products industry and energy. He lived in Tacoma with his family for 25 years, but now lives in Kent because his wife heads a five-state non-profit foundation headquartered in Ballard, and it only seemed a sensible compromise to make considering their workplaces are 40 miles apart.
Kelly Kearsley has been a business reporter at The News Tribune since 2005. She covers the Port of Tacoma and international trade. Being born and raised in Spokane she’s used to living in cities with inferiority complexes and, in fact, prefers it. Prior to working at The News Tribune, she spent three years as a reporter for The Bulletin in Bend, Oregon and another year working stints for The Associated Press and Seattle Times. She graduated from Pacific Lutheran University. She lives in Tacoma with her husband and miniature schnauzer.
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If the state's Utilites and Transportation approves, your gas bills could be going down this winter.
Down?
Yes, Puget Sound Energy, which supplies natural gas to much of the Puget Sound area, today asked the WUTC to reduce the price it charges for gas by 17.1 percent. That decrease, effective Oct. 1, would come on top of a 1.8 percent decrease that was effective in June.
Behind the request for a decrease is a decline in the wholesale prices the utility pays its suppliers. Natural gas prices have decreased along with gasoline and crude oil prices as the worldwide economy and demand have cooled.
According to the Bellevue-based utility, an average residential customer buying 68 therms of natural gas monthly will see a $14.88 decline in their average gas bill. That's about what customers were paying for the same amount of energy in 2005 before energy prices started climbing.
In the meantime, as PSE requests a price decrease because of supply cost reductions, it is asking the commission for a 2.5 percent increase in gas rates and a 7.4 increase in electricity rates because of additional investments the company has made in its districbution infrastrucure.
Those rate increases, if approved, won't go into effect until April next year.
