CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JULY 5, 2016, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JULY 5, 2016, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“BROWN SAFETY, CORRUPTION MOVES INADEQUATE”
As he submitted his May revision of
the state budget, now mostly enacted, Gov. Jerry Brown won praise both for its
relative stinginess and for the fact it included one addition aiming to ensure
more attention to safety from big utilities regulated by the state’s Public
Utilities Commission.
At almost the same moment, the PUC
opened a reconsideration of its 2014 decision on distributing costs from the
2012 failure of the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station, a ruling that
previously dunned consumers more than 70 percent of the $4.7 billion cost for
closing San Onofre.
And Brown signed a bill requiring
extensive testing of wells at the Aliso Canyon storage facility maintained by
the Southern California Gas Co. in northern Los Angeles before that site can
reopen and once again produce large profits for the company.
And yet, all this is plainly too
little and too late. Brown inflicted no penalties at all – not even a word of
criticism – on his PUC appointees who repeatedly voted for the San Onofre
ruling, even after the revelation that it was negotiated in a secret meeting
between the PUC’s disgraced former president and an executive since departed
from the Southern California Edison Co.
He said not a word about blackmailing
lies from the PUC, the state Energy Commission and other state agencies which
co-wrote an April study threatening electricity blackouts unless Aliso Canyon
is reopened soon. Those falsehoods – exposed, even conceded during a May
legislative hearing – have nevertheless been repeated often since.
Brown also punished no one at the
state prison department after it admitted the falsehood of a longtime claim
that serious criminals have never been sent to low-security firefighting camps.
There’s been more since then, even
some direct Brown hypocrisy over shipping coal from Utah through Oakland to
Asian markets. Turns out Brown, who famously told Pope Francis last spring that
“90 percent of the coal” reserves worldwide “can never be taken out of the
ground” because of climate change, has a financial interest in coal trains and
ships.
“Oakland” magazine reported that
public records show he owns a stake valued between $100,000 and $1 million in
Evergreen Park Plaza LLC, a real estate venture that figures to profit if coal
is exported through the former Oakland Army Base, where its parent company is
the master developer. The parent firm is controlled by Brown’s friend Phil
Tagami, who also hosted his 2005 wedding.
Then there’s the small matter of the
PUC and Energy Commission quietly entering into a confidentiality agreement
without any public hearings. Their pact would “ensure the nondisclosure of any
inspection, investigation or enforcement-related confidential information
shared between the (commissions).”
This deal was part of the consent
calendar in the Energy Commission’s May 17 meeting, where it passed without
comment. It aims to keep the public in the dark about new safety problems that
might arise at utilities regulated by both powerful commissions.
This is all the very opposite of the
transparency the governor promised in 2010 while campaigning to return to the
office he held for eight years in the 1970s and ‘80s.
Plus, this spring Brown vetoed a bill
requiring that persons trying to influence state procurement practices register
as lobbyists. The Fair Political Practices Commission had already labeled this
bill, possibly influencing billions of dollars in state spending, as a
“significant burden” where there is no “significant problem.”
Brown echoed this in his veto
statement, saying “I don’t believe this bill is necessary.”
But that bill just might have helped
save his former chief of staff, Gray Davis, who later became governor, only to
be undone in part by a procurement scandal in which the Oracle software company
donated $25,000 to his campaign less than a day after getting a large state
contract.
No one knows if a measure like this
could have spared Davis all that trouble and humiliation and prevented Arnold
Schwarzenegger from becoming governor.
What’s certain is that Brown’s
administration is anything but open and transparent, with few, if any,
consequences for corruption and lies, even when they are copiously documented.
The small positive moves Brown made in May didn’t go nearly far enough to fix
this problem and he has yet to speak his first words about much of what’s been
happening on his watch.
-30-
Email
Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough,
The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch
It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias
columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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