** FirstEnergy scandal is latest example of utility corruption, deceit ([link removed])
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By Matt Kasper on Jul 23, 2020 02:52 pm
Federal agents arrested ([link removed]) Ohio Speaker of the House Larry Householder, along with several lobbyists, on July 21 on charges that the group used $60 million of funds provided by the monopoly utility FirstEnergy Corp. in exchange for passing a law that bailed out that company’s nuclear and coal plants.
The scandal is the latest example of monopoly utility companies deceiving lawmakers, regulators, and the public to enrich executives and shareholders, and occasionally being criminally investigated or prosecuted for their actions. Many instances of utility corruption center around attempts to change policies or regulations in ways that would increase electric bills – often to cover costs at expensive power plants, win approval to construct controversial power plants, or restrict the growth of rooftop solar power.
** FirstEnergy and Rep. Householder’s racketeering operation
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While the government’s criminal complaint refers to FirstEnergy Corp. only as “Company A Corp.,” it makes clear that the company both provided the funding and was intimately involved in the scheme that Householder ran.
Householder used the $60 million provided by FirstEnergy to finance a takeover of the Ohio House of Representatives by legislative candidates who would be loyal to him. Those legislators then elected him as House Speaker in January 2019 after a fierce leadership battle.
Householder and the rest of the racketeering operation returned FirstEnergy’s largesse by ramming through HB 6, the law that bailed out FirstEnergy’s nuclear and coal plants that were economically struggling, as well as other coal plants in which FirstEnergy subsidiaries held partial ownership.
The bill – which cost electric customers in Ohio billions of dollars – also undid Ohio’s standards requiring utilities to use renewable energy for a modest portion of their generation, and to help customers save electricity via energy efficiency measures.
** ComEd’s admission to bribery and $200 million fine
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On July 17, ComEd agreed ([link removed]) to pay $200 million to resolve a federal criminal investigation into a years-long bribery scheme, as part of a three-year deferred prosecution agreement. According to the agreement with the Department of Justice, ComEd admitted that it arranged jobs, vendor subcontracts, and payments associated with those jobs and subcontracts for various associates of a high-level elected official for the state of Illinois – reported ([link removed]) to be Speaker Michael Madigan – to influence and reward the official for his efforts to pass legislation favorable to ComEd.
The agreement specifically mentions the 2011 Energy Infrastructure Modernization Act ([link removed]) (EIMA), and the 2016 Future Energy Jobs Act ([link removed]) (FEJA), as well as the “favorable rate structure” ensured to ComEd, which has benefited the utility to a tune of at least $150 million. EIMA provided ComEd a structure to spend ([link removed]) $2.6 billion in grid upgrades over a 10-year period, including smart meters. A major component of FEJA was the ratepayer-funded bailout ([link removed]) of the Quad Cities and Clinton nuclear power plants owned by Com’Ed’s parent company Exelon..
Screenshot of ComEd’s agreement with the Department of Justice. Source: [link removed]
According to Utility Dive, the advocacy group Public Citizen is planning to file ([link removed]) an official complaint with PJM Interconnection, the regional transmission organization for much of the Midwest, requesting that Exelon be barred from voting on policies over the three-year period of ComEd’s deferred prosecution.
** Federal regulators, prosecutors probe deceit around SCANA’s $10 billion nuclear boondoggle
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In February, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filed a civil fraud lawsuit ([link removed]) against two top former SCANA electric utility executives. The lawsuit alleges that senior SCANA executives, CEO Kevin Marsh and executive vice president Stephen Byrne, lied and deceived shareholders, regulators, and the public regarding the construction of two new nuclear units at the V.C. Summer site, which the company abandoned amid massive cost overruns in July 2017.
Byrne entered a guilty plea ([link removed]) on federal criminal charges of conspiracy to commit mail fraud and wire fraud last month, and The Post & Courier reported ([link removed]) today that, as a condition of his plea, Byrne will cooperate with federal prosecutors, giving them “insights and advantages as they continue to bring charges against the people involved in a failed $9 billion nuclear expansion project in South Carolina.”
Byrne still faces up to 5 years in prison, 3 years of supervised release, a $250,000 fine and forfeiture of pay and bonuses, even with the cooperation, according to the Post & Courier.
The SEC lawsuit comes after the South Carolina Public Service Commission concluded in early 2019 that SCANA, which has since been acquired by Dominion Energy, misled the agency ([link removed]) about the nuclear reactor construction project to win electric rate hikes.
The rate hikes that regulators granted to the South Carolina utility are one of a long list of examples of how utilities engineered the passage of laws that would shift the financial risk of building power plants further away from shareholders and onto ratepayers that Tony Bartelme documented ([link removed]) in December 2017 for The Post & Courier.
** Arizona Public Service’s pressured towns to break election laws during ballot campaign, following years of dark-money spending to elect friendly regulators
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In 2018, Arizona voters could have approved a constitutional amendment that would have required the state’s utilities to generate 50 percent of their electricity from renewable sources like solar and wind energy by 2030. Arizona Public Service, the state’s largest utility, fought the proposal and ultimately spent ([link removed]) $38 million to defeat the measure.
Emails obtained during the battle by EPI under the state public records law show that APS orchestrated a campaign ([link removed]) to get counties and towns across Arizona to pass resolutions decrying the ballot measure. Emails ([link removed]) show that APS had been notified that it was asking counties and towns to break the law by passing the resolutions.
On May 29, Yuma County Attorney Jon Smith emailed APS to tell the utility that having its Board of Supervisors sign a resolution against Prop. 127 would violate a state law against public agencies taking a position on ballot initiatives. Days later, APS again emailed to ask the county to adopt a resolution. Smith again told APS that state statute prevents the county from passing the resolution, citing case precedent. Yet six counties and towns ultimately adopted the APS-backed resolutions opposing the ballot measure, which resulted in an Attorney General investigation.
The incident was the latest in a long list of APS deceit and irresponsibility, including its spending of over $10 million ([link removed]) on dark-money groups that worked to elect APS-supported utility regulators to the Arizona Corporation Commission (ACC). These regulators voted for APS’ rate hike request that went into effect in 2017 ([link removed]) . The rate hike also included various changes to rate structures which have confused customers ([link removed]) and led to over-earning
([link removed]) . The regulators also approved ([link removed]) policies that stunted the growth of distributed solar energy.
APS and its parent company, Pinnacle West, finally admitted ([link removed]) in 2019 to its spending on the dark-money groups that worked to influence the ACC election outcomes.
APS’ actions last decade may have precipitated a change in CEOs at the end of 2019. The new CEO, Jeff Guldner, said ([link removed]) the company will stop spending on spending any more election money involving elections for its regulators on the Arizona Corporation Commission. The company has also since committed ([link removed]) to providing 100% carbon-free electricity to its customers by 2050, with a 2030 target of 45% renewables – similar targets to those that would have been mandated by the ballot initiative that it spent to defeat in 2018.
** Entergy’s paid actor scandal
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In March 2017, the New Orleans City Council voted to allow Entergy to construct a controversial natural gas plant. Advocacy groups and local journalists later revealed ([link removed]) that Entergy sub-contractors paid actors to feign public support in front of the council for the company’s proposed power plant.
An independent investigation released in October 2018, and with which Entergy did not fully cooperate, concluded ([link removed]) that the utility company “knew or should have known” about the astroturfing – refuting the results of Entergy’s internal investigation that it released earlier that year.
In October 2017, two weeks before a council hearing, Entergy New Orleans’ then-CEO Charles Rice Jr., sent a text message ([link removed]) to Yolanda Pollard, a communications manager for Entergy, asking how many people the company’s contractor, The Hawthorn Group, could recruit for the meeting. Pollard said Hawthorn had secured “50 people and 10 speakers.”
The independent investigators stated ([link removed]) ,
“The information recovered and reviewed to date … indicates that payment (and the obligation to pay) for these “supporters” went from Entergy, through Entergy’s vendors, and onto these individuals in order to secure attendance and participation as speakers on Entergy’s behalf at public hearings that occurred on October 16, 2017, and February 21, 2018.”
** Florida utilities’ deceptive 2016 solar ballot initiative
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In 2016, Florida voters were close to being tricked by the state’s monopoly utilities into voting for an amendment on the state ballot that would have fortified the utilities’ monopolies ([link removed]) and locked out rooftop solar companies.
Days before the election, Mary Ellen Klas of the Miami Herald/Tampa Times reported on audio ([link removed]) obtained by EPI and the Center for Media and Democracy that exposed how the industry attempted to deceive voters through the ballot amendment.
The audio ([link removed]) captured Sal Nuzzo, a vice president at the James Madison Institute, speaking at a State Policy Network conference pre-event in which he detailed the strategy used by Florida Power & Light, Duke Energy, and Southern Company to create and finance Amendment 1.
Nuzzo said ([link removed]) the amendment “would completely negate anything they [pro-solar interests] would try to do either legislatively or constitutionally down the road … To the degree that we can use a little bit of political jiu-jitsu and take what they’re kind of pinning us on and use it to our benefit either in policy, in legislation or in constitutional referendums — if that’s the direction you want to take — use the language of promoting solar, and kind of, kind of put in these protections for consumers that choose not to install rooftop.”
The Florida monopoly utilities contributed over $20 million ([link removed]) to the Amendment 1 group, Consumers for Smart Solar.
** Southern Company’s boondoggle in Mississippi
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In April 2019, the Civil Division of the Department of Justice informed Southern Company and its subsidiary Mississippi Power of an investigation related to the Kemper County energy facility, initially an effort to burn coal, capture the carbon emissions, and sell them oil drillers for enhanced oil recovery. The “clean coal” effort suffered massive cost overruns, and Southern eventually abandoned it ([link removed]) , running Kemper as a traditional gas plant instead.
Southern Company has said ([link removed]) the investigation relates to its negotiations with the U.S. Department of Energy as the two attempt to resolve and dispose of property at the Kemper facility. DOE gave $387 million ([link removed]) to Southern Company in its efforts to build the “clean coal” power plant. (Ernest Moniz, who was the Secretary of Energy during much of the Kemper plant’s construction, now sits on Southern Company’s board of directors ([link removed]) .)
A 2019 Mississippi Clarion Ledger article documented ([link removed]) allegations of fraud and cover-up made by Kelly Williams, a construction manager at the Kemper power plant. According to the article, “Williams said she became one of two construction site managers at the power plant project in 2010, when Southern Company’s then-CEO was telling investors the project was expected to cost $2.4 billion and be operational by 2014. Williams said she saw problems with the budget and cost immediately.”
Williams’ reported allegations occurred two years after a former utility engineer who blew the whistle on problems at the Kemper power plant, Brett Wingo, filed a lawsuit ([link removed]) against Southern Company for retaliation. Wingo provided audio recordings and documents to The New York Times ([link removed]) , which reported in July 2016 on the delays, cost overruns, and how consultants or engineers who worked on the project “repeatedly tried to conceal problems as they emerged.”
Wingo alleged ([link removed]) that he warned the company’s top executives that it would not be possible to meet key construction deadlines and that company management responded by retaliating against him. Wingo said this occurred while executives continued to assure investors and the public that Kemper’s schedule and budget targets would be met. The lawsuit has since been settled. An SEC investigation in Southern Company ([link removed]) regarding Kemper did not reach a conclusion ([link removed]) .
** Southern California Gas threatens public officials with “no social distancing” protests amid COVID-19
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The Los Angeles Times’ Sammy Roth reported ([link removed]) in May how Eric Hofmann, president of a labor union which represents Southern California Gas employees and chairman of the board of directors of the Southern California Gas-funded front group “Californians for Balanced Energy Solutions,” threatened San Luis Obispo officials with a protest that would have “no social distancing” amid the coronavirus outbreak.
San Luis Obispo officials had planned to vote on an energy code that would encourage construction of all-electric buildings, which directly threatens Southern California Gas’ revenue stream since the new buildings would not use gas appliances, and would not be hooked up to the gas distribution grid.
Hofmann sent an email on March 16 to San Luis Obispo officials and threatened them with the virus if they planned to vote on the policy:
“If the city council intends to move forward with another reading on a gas ban I can assure you there will be no social distancing in place … I strongly urge the city council to kick this can down the road to adhere to public health safety measures. Please don’t force my hand in bussing in hundreds and hundreds of pissed off people potentially adding to this pandemic … We will pull permits and close streets and have a massive protest on April 7th.”
San Luis Obispo canceled their vote but ultimately passed the policy ([link removed]) in June.
** Other forms of utility corruption: charitable contributions with strings attached
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EPI has documented other ways utilities attempt to buy the allegiance of policymakers and regulators, usually to the detriment of their customers.
In December 2019, EPI released a report that examined the philanthropic contributions of 10 leading investor-owned electric utilities ([link removed]) in the U.S. It details how these utilities use their charitable giving to manipulate politics, policies and regulation in ways designed to increase shareholder profits, often at the expense of low-income communities and communities of color who are more likely to bear the brunt of climate impacts and suffer higher levels of air pollution.
For instance, the report examined ([link removed]) DTE Energy’s charitable giving to faith leaders and organizations representing communities of color that in turn have supported various DTE Energy proposals in front of state regulators in recent years. One of these policies would have significantly reduced the rate at which a customer would be compensated for the electricity that their solar panels send back to the grid. The policy also would have added a fee on customers who install rooftop solar. During the time period utility regulators considered this proposal, a group called Michigan Energy Promise ([link removed]) emerged to back DTE Energy’s positions. The allies listed on Michigan Energy Promise’s website were mostly churches, chambers of commerce, and nonprofits that advocate for communities of
color. Many of the groups had either received thousands of dollars from the DTE Energy Foundation over the past five years, list the utility as a corporate sponsor on organization websites, or include a utility employee as a member of the board.
The report also detailed FirstEnergy’s attempts to use its charitable giving ([link removed]) to get support for its many attempts of a bailout over the years, including HB 6.
The post FirstEnergy scandal is latest example of utility corruption, deceit ([link removed]) appeared first on Energy and Policy Institute ([link removed]) .
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