CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, AUGUST 14, 2018, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, AUGUST 14, 2018, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
Many of California’s vital energy,
water and air quality decisions of the last few years may have been made in
secret meetings involving Gov. Jerry Brown’s office and his appointed heads of
key state agencies.
That revelation emerges from previously
withheld emails released by the California Public Utilities Commission in
response to a court order obtained by a San Diego consumer attorney who has fought
some of its most important rulings.
The released emails cover several
months in 2014, and some remain undisclosed, but there are no denials of the secret
meetings from anyone in state government, and they apparently continue.
There is disagreement about whether
these sessions violate California’s open meetings law, designed to ensure
decisions are made in full public view.
The gatherings include aides to the
governor and the heads of the PUC, the state Energy Commission, the state Air
Resources Board, the state Water Resources Control Board and board members of the
Independent System Operator, in charge of California’s electric grid.
The emails also strikingly reveal that
the top regulators meet frequently in private with high executives of major
utilities they regulate. Meetings sometimes include division chiefs with the state
agencies.
The group, calling itself the Energy
Principals, also meets with executives and officials of renewable energy
companies like those building huge solar thermal energy plants in the state’s
vast deserts. But there is no indication consumer groups or their
representatives have ever been included.
Subject matter for meetings during the
relatively short time period covered by the court order included an infamous
and since-revised agreement reached in a secret 2013 meeting in Warsaw, Poland,
between then-PUC President Michael Peevey and the Southern California Edison
Co. That deal, summarized by Peevey on a hotel napkin, assessed consumers about
70 percent of the almost $5 billion cost for closing the San Onofre Nuclear
Generating Station.
Other topics included renewable energy
issues and “peaker” electricity plants used only during power shortages.
There is no evidence any decisions
reached by the Energy Principals group were ever changed by any state agency
involved.
“Essentially, they’ve collapsed the
four big energy and water agencies into a single group organized out of the
governor’s office,” said Michael Aguirre, the former elected city attorney of
San Diego whose demands produced the previously-secret emails. “I’ve sent
letters demanding they give public notice of these meetings.”
Some meetings during the time period covered by the emails were
held in Peevey’s house in the posh Los Angeles suburb of La Canada-Flintridge
and in the home of air board chair Mary Nichols in the Los Feliz district of
Los Angeles.
The PUC was the only agency commenting
on the meetings, with spokeswoman Terrie Prosper implying in an email that the
Energy Principals group still meets regularly. “Discussions among the leaders
of various agencies must occur…to ensure the state properly manages resources
and considers the needs of California,” she said in an email.
And a spokesman for Brown told a
reporter that “It’s a basic function of government for agencies to work
cooperatively.”
Prosper insisted public notice of the
meetings is not required under California’s open meeting law, the Ralph M.
Brown Act.
But a 2003 public analysis of the
Brown Act by then-Attorney General Bill Lockyer found the law covers "standing committees
of a legislative body." Agencies like those in the Energy Principals group
have long been considered legislative bodies under the Brown Act and do give
advance notice of meetings. It’s difficult to see how a group of agency heads
that has met regularly for years would not be called a “standing committee.”
But Prosper defended the group’s
secrecy by saying “There was never a quorum of PUC members present.”
“One question this brings up is how
broad is the practice of secret meetings?” said Aguirre. “There is no way these
meetings should be held in secret.”
But they have been, and no one knows
how long that’s gone on. The bottom line: Agency heads should indeed meet and
coordinate their actions, but from now on, they need to do it publicly and
provide plenty of advance notice, as the law seems to require.
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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, go to www.californiafocus.net.
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, go to www.californiafocus.net.
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