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I 4i Iasi .4 kwasy ii m1 ' t cf l..i hi ' 41.- - If i V l klif fu,.sv fMl i Si'l I i ' wtoA Ht M t.f l4 !Miit4s t.Jtii i..i sii I (Raw. 4 J.fiMti' I i,' 4 (n-III nSjj'.IH'IH'k $ .a 4 '4ii i s' ?s I.'it 'ill .1 4 tj RaMi In A wVf I tail ,(U IUt4 . Ras M-U- i f v t til 4it4V -- ) Hull o '. 14 11 v IW U" tutf-- I tnd tm 'rna! J mi( $tilt " lu( uin;. .!.( ft.p.r 4H rf.iii M i (9 fe.HiK4 Iwi.tsf n ( .jhf tiluda .inifll.. J-- 4 rilit H'l III Mili.ulWk i btl!.iH.-fetoil I to an lli ail. $ nu nJl k t';tI i st . c i.( ; it i! fti.aS tmf fiilli ihim rfciur A;1.,irl jp.fU'4 I J ftlfi i H.i4 I a,t jtt ,vjt.i lotpa ,.. .,.( t.1 I,.,,. ,.nm-- 0.f to t IwCirtlnif.iiHdl. A A tiimt,i I I U I wc turmt'saniHj i I ' Mt ktfeilitrJ.iR'l JK Ms .! 4,t!K t iim )N RUJ lo:K Weber Job Corps To Build Wind Generator Bj MUtK t. MJt hLLALV SOUTH MBfR-Wc- Nr (fevn Cwp officials has jmkmnccJ their intention to fenld Utahs first wind power generator at their center near the mouth of Weher Canyon. Jh Uw, AtWJrg t Mr, lb wind mut f!.m at 12 14 miles per hour wi peuenr ,4 lb time in del ft tN gener-tof- s 1 u "V'cfc collet ling our own data. POWER FROM the $400.(8 to generator w ill h sold to Utah Power and Light, culling the centers electricity costs hy according to WBJC Director Ted Larsen, he explained, then another letter will he sent out to the respondents The idea for the unique project started, he said, about 18 months ago u hen the job corp organization. Vlaicrond Iow-c- r. to buy the wind generator for them. Water and IVivcr. according to Mr. Larsen, has already purchased a complete weather station for the W BJC. complete w uli a satellite hookup. THE TRAP call-tracin- asked the Department of laibor and Energy to look into and help the center obtain a grant for the wind generator. One of the newest in Mountain Bell's call tracing technologies is the pen register. It can immediately identify all calls dialed from a suspect's phone and is often used to identify obscene phone callers. PEN REGISTER g THE DEPARTMENT of Labor, through a program SALT LAKE CITY A Mountain Bell spokeswoman last week announced the Utah inauguration of one of the na- tion's first annoyance call bureaus, used to trap obscene and bothersome phone callers, but warned residents to use the service only in extreme situations. THE CUSTOMER has more control than anyone as faras discouraging calls." said Eve Mary Verde, public relations assistant staff manager. In a p method used to ward off the annoying calls. Mountain Belt advises customers to first hang up, step-by-ste- second, change their tele- phone number, and finally report the call to the Annoyance Call Bureau. THE BUREAU, set up only recently, handles obscene phone calls, bothersome debt collection calls and other calls annoying to Mountain Bell customers. According to Ms. Verde, the service is one of the first in the AT&T system, and the company is interested in seeing how Utah will handle the bureau. Obscene or harrassment phone calls, says Ms. Verde, are the most common in this area. Annoying debt collection calls are equally as disturbing. She said the number of calls coming into the bureau since it started has doubled, the service averaging now between calls per month. Until June of this year, 3400 annoyance calls were reported at the com- pany business office alone, and 21 of those were debt collection complaints. UTAH, if convicted, the penalty for making the calls is a $299 fine and-o- r up to six LN months in jail. The offense is a Class B misdemeanor. Ms. Verde pointed out several ways to discourage callers, ranging from simply hanging up the phone to complaining to the bureau. She emphasized that customers have to be in control of their own phone. most of the companies are very cooperative. up tight feeling that comes as the calls continue. SHE SAID when the phone company explains the situation to them and shows them a copy of the complaint, there are usually very few problems SHE SAID a lot of annoying calls are placed by people the victim knows, to frighten the the companys business line, they would not be the ones to -' prosecute in the criminal pro- WITH THE tracer technology, she said if a woman is on the phone at 8 p.m. and the obscene caller tries to call at the same time, the phone company can tell where the unconnected call is from. The second piece of valuable intervention equipment is the "trap." whereby cables are attached to the suspect's line so that if he makes a call to the victim, he cannot disconnect the line. individual, or bother them. The first method, of course, is to hang up. but if this doesnt work, Ms., Verde suggested changing the phone number. For a small monthly stipend and installation fee, the number can be changed, usually eliminating the problem, she said, in 95 percent of all cases. The phone company recommends keeping the number unpublished and warns residents to be very discriminating of who they give the number to. If the number is changed, Ms. Verde explained, it is not a good idea to have the unpub- lished number on personal checks. Instead, she recommended printing the work number. If people discriminate, she noted, "they wont have as many problems." FOR ANNOYING debt collection calls. Mountain Bell says the customers are within their rights to complain. The reason is many companies must adhere to certain telephone hours for their collection, but sometimes step out of bounds, according to Ms. Verde, on when they make calls. When were notified of it (annoying collection), we go to the company and tell them a complaint has been filed, she said. Because the loss of phone service could easily bankrupt many businesses, she said afterwards. She said although Mountain Bell can ultimately disconnect ceedings. FOR OBSCENE phone calls which continuously plague the phone owner. Mountain Bell encourages patrons to log all of the offensive calls and list the calls length, date, time, the number of occurrences, the people at home at the time, a vocal description of the caller and any suspects. Bureau Chief Frank Larsen operates as a service representative whose job is to handle any annoyance calls in northern and central Utah. Ms. Verde says Mountain Beil someday hopes to go state wide with the program, but now, in certain areas, service representatives must handle the calls, as was the case in Salt Lake and the surrounding areas before the bureau was established. SEPARATE FROM Mountain Bells business office, the bureau has accumulated some of the nations most sophisticated call tracing and intercepting equipment. All tracer identifies the number where the person is calling from, and can be identified immediately. Ms. Verde said conversations on the line cannot be heard, however, and stressed that people turning the problem over to the bureau often do it to relieve their personal tension and get over the THE PEN register can be used only if the victim has a suspect in mind. The register is placed on the suspect's line and calls made out from the number can be identified by the phone company. The pen register and trap are often used together to apprehend callers. MS. VERDE said each tracing request is handled according to individual need and re- quires individual attention. but noted that the victims have to make some commitments to the phone company before the trace will be done. Before we will put on any tracing equipment, she said, the person must sign forms agreeing to presecute if the line is identified. IN TOO many cases, she said, the victim finds out who the caller is, but doesnt want to prosecute. The process is too expensive to place the trace without commitment, she added. From the last six months of 1979 through the first six months of 1980, Mountain Bell rrceived over 4.200 com- plaints about annoying calls. In 1979. in the last six months, 3 6 people requested a trace be put on the line. In the first six months of 1980, 448 requested intervention. 1 OF THE traces put on in 1979. 50 lines were identified, whereas, in 1980. 75 were identified. Ms. Verde said people shouldn't be upset that so few of the lines were identified. In many cases! she said, the situation is innocent, or a coincidence. ilt; There are every year, however, several hundred annoyance calls prosecuted in ' Utah. , i- Governor Names Cornaby As Judge Gov. Scott M. Matheson today named Fourth Circuit Court Judge Douglas L. Cornaby to the Second District Court. He will replace the Honorable Thornley K. Swan at the conclusion of his term. Judge Swan chose not to stand for to another term. JUDGE CORNABYS excellent service to the judiciary has been amply demonstrated during his 19 years of service on the Fourth Circuit Court Bench, said Gov. Matheson. I am pleased that he is willing to accept this new assignment, and I am confident he will be an outstanding district court judge. Judge Cornaby resides in Layton with his wife, Etholene Burton Cornaby, who is a graduate of BYU and is a registered nurse. They are the parents of six children. The Judge is the son of Mark T. and Leola Cornaby of Salt Lake City. A GRADUATE of the University of Utah College of Law, he is a member os the Utah State Bar. He holds a degree in juris doctor and has done .undergraduate work at the U. of U. and BYU. He holds minors in English, sociology, psychology and philosphy. He is currently a bishop in the Layton 1th Ward. He has been an adult leader with the Boy Scouts of America for 22 1 n known as set up to find new forms of energy, received only one job corp application for a wind machine, from Weber Basin. So. in order to estimate the fcasihil ity of the generator, center officials traveled to Hill Air Force Base, in Ogden to collect wind data for the canvon. pro-actio- process. By MARK D. MICKKLSEN years and is currently vice president of Lake Bonneville Council. He is a member of the Layton Rotary Club and their past president. He has been civil defense director for Layton city for five years and served on the Davis County Civil Defense Prepardness committee. He has a professional consultation service for the Davis County Community Action Program and related programs for the poor. He is a three year member of the Unified Court Study Committee. HE SERVED in the U.S. Army for two years and saw service in Germany during the occupation. Six years in reserves with an honorable discharge in I960. ci!iie AT ttlBIR Ifein. bcsiiJ thus con Jo ions do exist, 1 one-thir- Mountain Bell Central Office Technician Julie McEwan connects a trap on an annoyance caller's line. When calls are between made the connection the. suspect and victim cannot be broken. The trap" is used often in the b Through the' pro-actio- n program, which is now handled through the county commissioners. money is funneled through the commission for projects, then into the WBJC facility, according to Mr. Larsen. At present. $20,000 is available for the initial planning. $400,000 for implementa- tion of the energy-relate- d program. centers third alterna- Hi ask their parent "WERE WAITING lor a response from them." he said, but emphasized that the other alternatives are a possibility. "Wed rather go with Water and Power, or a donation, or both." he said. The largest cost in having the generator is the stoiage of power, he said, explaining that all of the power generated will be sold to Utah Power and Light . w ho are required by law to buy it. THE POWER will he goner ll&l. sxsiem and used lor Mr. Larsen said. Weber Basin will then buy the power back at the higher price, actually sax ing the center on their currently electric bill. The center currently pays ated into the state-wid- e disin-butio- one-thir- d THE PROBLEM in this, first of three alternatives, is n that under the program, 65 percent of the $400,000 must be spent on employee wages and fringe benefits. Since the WBJC center already pays its students, the program requires the hiring of 30 outside members for thee final construction. Director Larsen said the center cant possibly handle 30 extra people, but left the option open. In their second plan, WBJC officials put out he tive was feelers saying they would accept any donation of a wind generator. Advertised in a federal publication. Commerce Daily Business, the job corp received 26 responses. According to Mr. Larsen, letters were then sent to each company with attached wind data from Hill AFB. THIS WAS the center's first mistake, he said. Apparently, the wind data from HAFB was estimated too low for a lot of the companies to consider the Weber Canyon location. Since the data w as taken from a similar. but more remote Ogden canyon, WBJC people decided the data on Weber Canyon should be done separately. - $65,000 per year for elec- tricity. According to Larsen, the generators are often up to high. "It will make the center very visible." he said. 175-fe- WHEN INSTALLED, he hopes the area can he landscaped and a walkway put in so community people can visit. Aside from being the first wind power system in Utah. Weber Busin's Job Corp will be the first job corp in the county to attempt such a pro- ject. IN MEDICINE Bow. Wyo Water and Power is putting up a wind farm, he said. Mr. Larsen expects con. struction of the generator to begin within a month, and said the current weather station at the center may have to be moved off the mountain for installation of the wind machine. HE SAID the government is asking all the job corp centers nationw ide to cut gas and energy consumption as much as We have to get it possible. into our goals and achieve it (conservation! every year. |