From Energy and Policy Institute <[email protected]>
Subject Political consultant for pipeline company teams up with anti-wind and solar activists in Michigan
Date November 9, 2023 1:21 PM
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** Political consultant for pipeline company teams up with anti-wind and solar activists in Michigan  ([link removed])
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By Dave Anderson on Nov 08, 2023 09:57 am
A new group formed by anti-wind and solar activists in Michigan has teamed up with a Republican political consulting firm that also represents an oil and gas pipeline company to fight legislation that would make it easier to site and build renewable energy projects in the state.

Our Home, Our Voice (OHOV) is a 501(c)(4) organization incorporated ([link removed]) in the State of Michigan earlier this year.

“Our Home, Our Voice is a pure grassroots coalition of local officials and private citizens dedicated to protecting Michigan’s long-standing right of local regulation of land use,” Kevon Martis, OHOV’s co-founder and a long-time anti-wind activist ([link removed]) , said last month in a presentation ([link removed]) to the Michigan House Energy, Communications and Technology Committee.

“OHOV is funded entirely by rural residents and receives no industry support of any kind,” Martis’s presentation also said.

A visit to the “About” page for OHOV’s private Facebook group ([link removed]) revealed that the group’s admins and moderators include Lucy Cornwell and Emily Van Camp, both of whom are listed as employees of the Marketing Resource Group ([link removed]) (MRG), a public relations firm in Lansing that’s represented the Wolverine Pipe Line Company ([link removed]) for more than twenty years.

Wolverine Pipe Line Co. is jointly controlled by the Mobil Pipe Line Company, Sunoco Pipeline L.P., and several smaller companies, according to an annualreport filed ([link removed]) with federal regulators in April by Mobil Pipe Line, which is a unit of ExxonMobil. Energy Transfer also lists Wolverine Pipe Line Co. as a subsidiary ([link removed]) in SEC filings.

OHOV is opposing legislation – House Bills 5120 ([link removed](S(hi1wxqx1ttwpxuxgvc1icviy))/mileg.aspx?page=getObject&objectName=2023-HB-5120) and 5121 ([link removed](S(4mwr3wrxkvjax0pj2uk0yocx))/mileg.aspx?page=getObject&objectName=2023-HB-5121) – recently passed by Democrats in the Michigan House that would help streamline development of renewable energy projects ([link removed]) by providing the Michigan Public Service Commission with more control over approval of new wind and solar farms. Democrats said the bills were amended ([link removed]) prior to the Michigan House vote to allow for more local control over renewable energy projects in order to address local concerns.

OHOV took credit for writing resolutions adopted by some Michigan townships and counties calling on state lawmakers to maintain local control over wind and solar projects in a September newsletter ([link removed]) posted on the group’s website.

The name “Lucy Cornwell” is listed as the “Author” in the document properties of the draft resolution ([link removed]) that’s linked from the “Take Action” page ([link removed]) of OHOV’s website.

In addition, the name “Chelsea Yi” is listed as the “Author” in the document properties of instructions on “How to download & pass the local resolution in your township” linked from OHOV’s Take Action page ([link removed]) . A “Chelsea Yi” also works as a senior accounting manager for the MRG.

MRG supported earlier legislation that would have ceded local control over some pipeline projects to state regulators, legislation that would have benefited the firm’s clients in the oil and gas industry at the time.

In 2005, Donna Halinski, then an account manager for MRG, wrote an op-ed ([link removed]) supporting legislation that provided state regulators with the final say on pipeline projects “placed in limited access highways on state land.”

Halinski wasn’t shy about the fact that the 2005 legislation would benefit the Wolverine Pipe Line Co. by enabling it to bypass local opposition to one of its projects from the City of Lansing. Her op-ed did not state that Wolverine Pipeline Co. was a client of MRG. Halinski said she was writing on behalf of a coalition of industry groups that supported that legislation, and listed the Associated Petroleum Industries of Michigan and Michigan Electric and Gas Association among the bill’s supporters.

Halinski left MRG in 2020 and started her own consulting firm.


** Our Home, Our Voice co-founder Kevon Martis is listed as a senior policy fellow by a coal industry-backed group in Virginia
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Martis also leads the Interstate Informed Citizens Coalition, a Michigan-based organization that has fought wind and solar farms ([link removed]) in Michigan and other states like neighboring Ohio ([link removed]) for over a decade.

Martis is listed as a senior fellow ([link removed]) at the Energy & Environment Legal Institute, a Virginia-based group that’s known for its coal industry funding ([link removed]) and attacks on scientists who study the impacts of burning fossil fuels on the Earth’s climate ([link removed]) .

The Washington, D.C.-based Institute for Energy Research, another front group for the fossil fuel industry ([link removed]) , has for years promoted Martis’s anti-wind and solar efforts on its blog MasterResource.org ([link removed]) .

Martis said in his presentation ([link removed]) to state lawmakers last month that he receives “no industry funding of any kind.”

“Media reports of financial ties to various entities are false,” Martis’s presentation also said.

Joshua Van Camp, who is also involved with the Interstate Informed Citizens Coalition, is listed with the State of Michigan as OHOV’s incorporator ([link removed]) .


** Our Home, Our Voice hired a Lansing lobbying firm
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OHOV also hired the Lansing-based lobbying firm Capitol Strategies Group ([link removed]) , and has spent thousands of dollars on lobbying this year.

Capitol Strategies Group also lobbies for Calpine Energy Solutions in Michigan ([link removed]) , which generates electricity primarily from coal and methane gas ([link removed]) . Calpine previously spent $2.7 million ([link removed]) to oppose a transmission project in Maine that, if ever completed, would deliver clean hydropower from Canada to New England, where Calpine owns power plants that burn gas and diesel fuel oil.

Top photo by Alex Gorzen from flickr ([link removed]) . CC BY-SA 2.0 DEED license ([link removed]) . Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic

The post Political consultant for pipeline company teams up with anti-wind and solar activists in Michigan ([link removed]) appeared first on Energy and Policy Institute ([link removed]) .
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