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Citizens group asks AG to investigate green-energy ‘corruption’ in Vermont government 

Credit:  By Bruce Parker | April 11, 2016 | watchdog.org ~~

MONTPELIER, Vt. – A citizen-led group is calling on Vermont Attorney General William Sorrell to investigate ethically questionable relationships between government officials and renewable energy developers in the state.

On March 22, Vermonters for a Clean Government delivered a 16-document packet to the attorney general’s office that provides ammunition for investigating “suspected misconduct” among top Vermont officials.

The group’s eight-page petition for a corruption investigation cites potential ethics violations ranging from favoritism and conflicts of interest to influence peddling and collusion.

READ: VCG Petition for a Corruption Investigation

According to the Swanton-based group, cozy connections between government officials and renewable-energy companies have resulted in regulatory capture, a form of corruption that occurs when state regulators advance the interests of corporations and their associated lobbyists and trade groups.

VCG’s petition takes aim at five instances in which state officials or agencies had the appearance of advancing green-energy business interests over the objections of towns and local residents.

Officials mentioned in the petition include House Speaker Shap Smith and House Energy Committee Chair Tony Klein, along with current and former officials from the Public Service Board, the Public Service Department and the Agency of Natural Resources. The group provided a flow chart of various officials and their connection to outcomes favorable to green-energy businesses.

Members of VCG claim the officials had conflicts of interest while conducting state business with developers and their law firms, and that those conflicts resulted in preferential treatment. Companies cited in the petition include AllEarth Renewables, Green Mountain Power, UPC Vermont Wind and Eolian Renewable Energy.

While the group stops short of alleging criminal wrongdoing, VCG members want the attorney general to open an “impartial, in-depth, formal investigation” into cases of suspected misconduct cited in the petition.

The group also claims that citizens and town leaders have endorsed dozens of bills at the Statehouse to improve renewable energy siting, but that those efforts were blocked by elected representatives and state agencies captured by green corporate interests.

“I think regulatory capture encompasses the whole picture – the appointments, the bills, the money. It’s two words that sum up the whole packet,” said Sally Collopy, a Swanton resident and member of Vermonters for a Clean Government.

Collopy said she hopes Vermont will follow the lead of New York, where Attorney General Eric Schneiderman last week issued a revised code of conduct for that state’s wind energy industry, in part due to ties between government officials and developers.

“It is their job and responsibility to do similar to what Eric Schneiderman, AG in New York, did to investigate this and look into it deeper and get to the bottom of it,” she said. “We deserve that based on the length of time this has been going on.”

Vermonters for a Clean Government is one of many citizen groups to arise in response to Vermont’s long-range energy plan. That plan lays out a path for Vermont to become the nation’s first all-green-energy economy, with 90 percent of power coming from renewable sources by 2050. On March 15, the citizen-led Irasburg Ridgeline Alliance filed a complaint with Vermont’s attorney general and the U.S. Federal Trade Commission accusing wind-energy producers of violating consumer protection laws. Other groups pushing back against Big Renewables include Grafton Woodlands Group, which is opposing a 28-turbine power plant in Windham County, and Oppose Swanton Wind, which helped organize the 731-160 vote in November against a seven-turbine plant intended for Swanton.

Michael Duane, Vermont’s senior assistant attorney general, confirmed that his office is reviewing materials submitted by Vermonters for a Clean Government. He said while the petition lacks any formal allegations, it likely falls under the jurisdiction of the Division of General Counsel and Administrative Law.

“We can only do what the statute allows the attorney general to do, and (the petition) doesn’t seem to be an allegation of any criminal wrongdoing,” Duane said. “So, we’re looking at the materials that came in to see if there is anything our office could do regarding what’s in the papers that were filed.”

Source:  By Bruce Parker | April 11, 2016 | watchdog.org

This article is the work of the source indicated. Any opinions expressed in it are not necessarily those of National Wind Watch.

The copyright of this article resides with the author or publisher indicated. As part of its noncommercial educational effort to present the environmental, social, scientific, and economic issues of large-scale wind power development to a global audience seeking such information, National Wind Watch endeavors to observe “fair use” as provided for in section 107 of U.S. Copyright Law and similar “fair dealing” provisions of the copyright laws of other nations. Send requests to excerpt, general inquiries, and comments via e-mail.

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