CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, JULY 29, 2016, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“AUDIT SHOWS WHY PUC REFORM PLAN NOT ENOUGH”
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, JULY 29, 2016, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“AUDIT SHOWS WHY PUC REFORM PLAN NOT ENOUGH”
Less than a week had passed after Gov.
Jerry Brown and several state legislators giddily announced their package of
reforms for the scandal-ridden California Public Utilities Commission before an
official audit revealed why that plan is simply not good enough.
The audit by the state’s Department of
General Services marked the first time in 20 years that the PUC’s practices had
been officially examined, and the commission was found severely wanting.
But there have been and likely will be
no consequences for anyone involved.
Also, no one has explained why 20
years passed between audits, when General Services reviews are supposed to come
every three years. Perhaps it was because California’s last three governors –
Brown, Arnold Schwarzenegger and Gray Davis – were all sympathetic to the
commission’s steadfast favoritism of the huge companies it regulates over their
customers.
The audit found the commission did not
maintain proper paperwork on contracts and other matters. It said PUC employees
most likely misused gasoline credit cards. But the most egregious offense noted
came when the commission lawyered up in early 2015, just as federal and state
agents began investigating some of its members for possible criminal
wrongdoing.
Panic and fear ran rampant in the
PUC’s San Francisco headquarters at the time, just after authorities searched
the La Canada-Flintridge home of the recently-departed former commission
President Michael Peevey. That raid founded evidence Peevey and executives
of the Southern California Edison Co. secretly agreed to dun customers $3.3
billion, or about 70 percent of the costs to close the San Onofre Nuclear
Generating Station, shuttered because of an Edison blunder. An almost identical
agreement soon became official.
Commissioners voted to hire an outside
criminal law firm to help them through the investigation, awarding a contract
that so far has amounted to about $12 million for the law firm SheppardMullin.
The General Services audit did not
question the commission’s authority to do anything it has done, including
awarding that contract. But it said the contract was “not…signed by a party who
had been delegated signature authority in writing…”
In short, there was never proper legal
authority for the firm – which has so far been most visible in helping the
commission stonewall requests for documents and other information – to get all
that money.
There are other questions about the
propriety of commissioners under criminal investigation using state money to
hire defense attorneys. The only PUC response to those questions was to cite
government code section 995.8, which says a public entity can only hire
criminal lawyers to defend present or former officials if “The public entity
determines that such defense would be in the best interest of the public
entity…” The PUC would have to hold hearings to make such a circular
determination, but it never even did that.
The audit, then, makes it clear the
commission lawyered up illegally in two ways, both by failing to hold hearings
on whether it should hire SheppardMullin and by letting an unauthorized person
sign the contract.
Yet there are no consequences. Brown
has said nothing about any of this. PUC President Michael Picker, who
repeatedly says his agency’s “culture” needs big changes, steadfastly refused
to answer questions about the dicey contract.
That means the PUC, whose members
cannot be fired during their six-year terms, is almost completely unaccountable
for its actions. It acts illegally with impunity and no one touches its top
officials.
That won’t change under the reform
package, which includes several positives including provisions calling for a
new ethics ombudsman and a deputy director in charge of the safety of natural
gas and electricity transmission lines.
Those are positive changes, negotiated
largely between Brown and Democratic Assemblyman Mike Gatto of Los Angeles,
whose bill to break up the PUC and divide its tasks among several other state
agencies easily passed the Assembly before Brown paid it any heed. But their
deal, if passed by the Legislature as expected, leaves commissioners as
unaccountable as ever.
And that makes the reforms too little
and far too late to help consumers very much.
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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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