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Legislators Asked To Force Disclosure Of Private Law Firm’s “Bounty” For $9.5 Million ExxonMobil NRD Settlement

August 17th, 2022 No comments

NRD Lawsuit Proceeds Are Dedicated to Public Compensation & Restoration Of Damage

The Public Has A Right To Know Amount Of Private Law Firm Contingency Fees

The Murphy  Attorney General and DEP recently issued a press release to announce a $9.5 million “natural resource damage” (NRD) lawsuit settlement with ExxonMobil.

The proposed settlement was published in the August 5, 2022 NJ Register (54 N.J.R. 1647(b)) for public comment (60 day comment period).

I have a lot of problems with this settlement, which I will write about in a future post. But for today, I want to focus exclusively on the compensation to be paid to a private law firm from the proceeds of the $9.5 million settlement.

The DEP was represented by private legal counsel,KANNER & WHITELEY, L.L.C., A Louisiana L.L.C., as Special Counsel to the Attorney General.

Neither the press release nor the settlement agreement state how much was paid to the Kanner law firm.

Every dollar that is paid from the settlement to Kanner diverts money from compensating the public and restoring damages to precious natural resources.

There is no way to know whether the settlement is in the public interest unless the compensation to Kanner is disclosed.

DEP masks the compensation issue in the text of the public notice: (my emphasis)

All settlement funds recovered, less the costs of suit, legal, and administrative fees, will be held in NJDEP’s dedicated natural resource damage account subject to legislative appropriation for specific natural resource restoration activities in accordance with the New Jersey State Constitution, Article VIII, Section 2, Paragraph 9

I previously filed an OPRA public records request for this information on the compensation of the law firm representing DEP at the NRD lawsuit at the Ford Ringwood site, but the information from the retainer agreement was redacted, see:

Expecting the same treatment in the ExxonMobil case, I wrote to Senator Smith to request his help in asserting public disclosure of the compensation rate or legal fees paid to Kanner.

Dear Senator Smith:

The Attorney General and DEP recently announced a NRD settlement with ExxonMobil for $9.5 million.

As you know, those recovered funds legally are dedicated to compensating the public for NRD damages (lost use, et al) and restoring NRD damages.

However, the AG was represented by private special Counsel and the retainer agreement with that firm allocates an undisclosed contingency fee payment.

The NRD settlement was recently published in the NJ Register and is now open for public comment.

The public has a right to know how much a private law firm was compensated, especially because these NRD monies are legally dedicated to compensating the public and diversion to private law firms detracts from restoring damaged natural resources.

I request your assistance in obtaining the critical public information I requested in the OPRA below.

Here is the OPRA I filed:

“I request the following public records:

1) compensation records reflecting legal fees and NRD settlement monies distributed to the law firm of KANNER & WHITELEY, L.L.C. A Louisiana L.L.C., Special Counsel to the Attorney General, pursuant to the retainer agreement with that firm.

According to a settlement agreement between DEP and Exxon regarding NRD damages at the Lail site, the DEP was legally represented by special counsel law firm of KANNER & WHITELEY, L.L.C. A Louisiana L.L.C. Special Counsel to the Attorney General see:

https://nj.gov/oag/newsreleases22/2022-08-12_NJDEP_V_EM_CJ.pdf

The subject settlement recently was published in the NJ Register for public comment and is now open for public comment.

The Joint AG/DEP press release states that the NRD settlement was for $9.5 million, but does not specify the share of that settlement that was paid to the Kanner law firm.

This information is a public record and must be disclosed as it is in the public interest and the public has a right to know how much the law firm was paid and how much of the settlement will be located to restoration. That information is vital to commenting on whether the public has been fully compensated for NRD damages.”

We’ll keep you posted, but I am not optimistic, as Senator Smith has run away from the NRD issue ever since corporate polluters killed the NRD Task Force he created to establish NRD standards and methods to monetize NRD injuries.

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Murphy DEP Fossil “Cavern” Storage Rules Linked To Proposed Delaware River LNG Export Project

August 15th, 2022 No comments

Fortress Energy LNG Export Lawyers Playing The Inside DEP Regulatory Game

Climate and Environmental Justice Advocates Are Duped

The Public Will Be Shocked To Learn Of These DEP Policies

Exactly three (3) months ago, we warned about proposed Murphy DEP regulations that would promote the expansion of underground storage of fossil fuels in “caverns”, see:

Today, better late than never, NJ Spotlight wrote about those DEP proposed rules, and they didn’t pull any punches with the headline, see:

The Spotlight story starts off on the wrong foot, seemingly falling into exactly the trap we warned about:

I suspect that DEP will spin these rules as updating or modernizing outdated permits or regulations based on an ancient 1951 law. DEP will use the LNG restriction to obfuscate and divert.

But make no mistake, just the opposite is the case: in fact, the proposed rules effectively promote expansion of fossil infrastructure, protect existing permits, and continue a dangerous practice that should be banned.

But the the rest of the content of the story – although missing the point on some big issues (see below) – is unusually good as well.

I) Documenting Fossil Industry Influence

To their credit, NJ Spotlight reporter Andrew Lewis did his homework – real journalism instead of the typical he said/she said crap.

Mr. Lewis filed an OPRA request for the public comments on the DEP rule proposal. That provides the actual industry position, not the spin from their press releases and media people.

Just as we warned, Lewis was able to document that Fortress Energy, the corporation proposing the Delaware River LNG export facility in Gibbstown, is playing the DEP regulatory game behind the scenes.

Lewis absolutely nails it with this quote, that connects all the dots. BOOM!

While emails and calls to the Repauno Port & Rail Terminal went unanswered, NJ Spotlight News did receive, through an Open Public Records Act request, a copy of a public comment submitted on June 13 to the DEP by David Miller, an attorney for the law firm Giordano, Halleran & Cielsa, who was writing on behalf of Delaware River Partners LLC.

“The proposed Cavern Rules are the culmination of a considerable and concerted effort by Department staff and those in the regulated community to craft a protective and workable regulatory framework,” Miller wrote. “Given current market trends and international energy needs, underground storage caverns present a unique opportunity to serve as a driver of local and regional economic growth.”

Miller went on to underscore Delaware River Partners LLC’s position that the DEP should consider all liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) products “as a single regulated substance.”

One LPG rule fits all?

“As a result,” Miller wrote, “if geologic conditions are found to be suitable for one LPG product, that determination can be safely applied to all LPG products provided the cavern is designed to accommodate the maximum operating pressure for any LPG product.”

 Let’s break that down to emphasize what it really means:

1. “The proposed Cavern Rules are the culmination of a considerable and concerted effort by Department staff and those in the regulated community”

This exposes what is known as “regulatory capture”. The Fortress Energy lawyers are so smug and arrogant that they openly brag about their undue and corrupt influence on DEP regulators.

These are the kind of stunning admissions journalists can expose when they do real work and get inside the DEP game. Bravo!

2. to craft a protective and workable regulatory framework”

Once again, we get an open admission that the DEP regulators are working to craft a regulatory framework that “works” for the industry.

Worse, this phrase can be interpreted – often accurately – that the DEP regulatory framework is designed to protect the industry and provide “regulatory certainty” that is necessary for private investment.

3. “as a single regulated substance.”

A single regulatory substance would mean that the rules would promote expansion of storage  “for any LPG product”, which means fracked gas and LNG export.

Just as we warned:

Don’t be fooled by the exclusion of storage of LNG. The DEP proposal would allow underground storage of fracked natural gas, which can easily be converted to LNG for export.

This means that DEP regulations will promote LNG export, just as the lawyers for the Fortress Energy LNG export project advocated.

While NJ Spotlight reports this concern, they do not fully emphasize the significance:

And while the proposed regulations would exclude liquefied natural gas from the list of products that can be stored in underground storage caverns — since it must be kept at minus 259 degrees Fahrenheit — the prohibition would not impact the construction of nearby LNG plants or export terminals. Fracked natural gas can still be pumped or transported from an underground storage cavern to a nearby facility and ultimately converted to LNG.

II) Some Serious Omissions And Distortions On Climate and Environmental Justice

That’s all the good reporting, but unfortunately, the NJ Spotlight story misses the mark on climate and environmental justice issues, largely do to reliance on sources that just don’t know what they are talking about.

Here’s the worst:

Marcus Sibley, chairman of the New Jersey Progressive Equitable Energy Coalition, views the expansion of underground storage caverns as an affront to the state’s landmark Environmental Justice Law, which requires the DEP “to evaluate the environmental and public health impacts of certain facilities on overburdened communities when reviewing certain permit applications.”

This is not the first egregious error by Mr. Sibley, and they are not honest mistakes.

The “landmark environmental justice law” he’s been cheerleading for does not apply to DEP cavern regulations or to the DEP permits DEP will issue to caverns pursuant to the propose regulations (if they are adopted).

That EJ law is riddled with loopholes and technical flaws, as I’ve written about numerous times so won’t go into here.

To his credit, Sibley correctly blasts the privatization aspects of the DEP proposal as well as the potential risks to EJ communities (but with respect to climate, not so much).

The Spotlight story also goes very easy on Delaware Riverkeeper.

As we wrote, Riverkeeper actually supported the DEP proposal of regulations:

The folks at Delaware Riverkeeper played the inside DEP game and got duped. DRN actually supported the development of regulations, instead of just opposing the need for this practice and seeking decommissioning of existing caverns and a ban on expansion or promotion of new fossil infrastructure. Remarkably, they did this despite noting that the Gibbstown LNG project was seeking expansion of the current cavern capacity of 186,000 barrels to 3 million barrels! 

Riverkeeper now looks like they blew the whistle on this, while they failed to do that and instead played the inside DEP stakeholder game. AS a result, the public, who will strongly oppose this insanity, has been in the dark until today.

III) Finally, there are some large gaps in the story, including:

1) Failure to report that the: a) Gov.’s Executive Orders on climate and energy; b) the Global Warming Response Act; c) the current DEP regulations; d) the DEP cavern regulatory proposal; e) the environmental justice statute; and f) the DEP’s proposed environmental justice regulations ALL DO NOT APPLY TO THE DEP CAVERN REGULATORY PROPOSAL OR TO THE DEP PERMITS DEP WILL ISSUE PURSUANT TO THE PROPOSAL (if it is adopted).

This goes for the environmental impact assessment provisions in the DEP proposed cavern rule.

Do I make myself clear?

Mr. Sibley and Delaware Riverkeeper surely must know this. So why don’t they warn the public about it and pressure the Governor and DEP to close these loopholes?

2) failure to report the current DEP Commissioner’s prior legal work for Fortress Energy in securing DEP permits and his ethics recusal (Spotlight previously reported on that, based on our disclosures, bu with no attribution or link to Wolfenotes:

LaTourette’s [recusal] memo lists the matters before the DEP that he worked on while he was an environmental attorney with a Newark law firm immediately before joining DEP in September 2018. Those matters include the Repauno Port and Rail Terminal, a project on which he represented Delaware River Partners on “all remediation and permitting concerns” before the DEP, the Delaware River Basin Commission (DRBC) and two federal agencies, according to the document, which was obtained via an Open Records Act request filed by Bill Wolfe, a former DEP employee.

3) failure to report the special treatment and unusual regulatory approvals that the Fortress LNG project has benefited from. For example, just days ago, we wrote about the most recent one of them:

4) failure to report on the direct related energy policy and fossil infrastructure issues, and the role of gas infrastructure.

5) Lewis downplayed the California Aliso Canyon disaster we highlighted.

6) The long delay in reporting this May story and the fact that NJ Spotlight filed OPRA request to get the DEP regulatory source documents suggests the power of the fossil industry. Spotlight had to make their reporting bullet proof, largely because they likely feared the consequences of pushback from fossil.

We’ll keep you posted.

[End Note: I like to avoid race based and divisive arguments, but I should note that a reader just emailed me to note that I missed an important flaw in the EJ law. The definition of an EJ community ignores poor and working class white communities, he writes:

Gibbstown is not an EJ community- even though it has lots of industry super fund sites recra sites – it doesn’t not have enough minorities or people that speak other languages -Short Hills ,Alpine West Windsor are but working class white communities are not

Wow.

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Point Wilson

August 14th, 2022 No comments

Snow Capped Mt. Baker Across The Salish Sea

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A very fine place: Point Wilson

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And here’s the beach:

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And the lighthouse:

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Despite Gov. Murphy’s Vow To Stop The Project, DRBC Extends Expired Approvals And Fortress Energy Remains “Fully Committed” To LNG Export Plant On Delaware River

August 13th, 2022 No comments

DRBC Extends Approvals With No Public Process

Murphy DEP Commissioner Previously Served As Lawyer On The Project

DRBC Extension Is Compelling Evidence That Gov. Murphy’s Opposition Is Not Genuine

The Delaware River Basin Commission (DRBC) recently granted a request by Fortress Energy to extend DRBC approvals for the controversial LNG export project along the Delaware River in Gibbstown, NJ.

The initial DRBC approval was slated to expire on June 12, 2022. Expiration could have forced the project back to square one to re-apply for DRBC approvals, or at least seek DRBC approval after additional rounds of DRBC technical review and public hearings on the extension request.

This is a massive new fossil infrastructure project that would expand fracking and cause significant increases in greenhouse gas emissions, especially highly potent methane.

As such, the project directly contradicts NJ Gov. Murphy’s numerous (toothless) Executive Orders and personal public commitments to reduce greenhouse gas emissions (read the Fortress request and DRBC approval here – documents provided by Delaware Riverkeeper).

Fortress Energy emphasized that they remain “fully committed” to the project:

Screen Shot 2022-08-13 at 7.46.48 AM

The DRBC extension was granted for an additional 3 years, until June, 12, 2025

In an unusual move, particularly on a project that has generated such huge public opposition, DRBC Executive Director Tambini issued the extension unilaterally by letter on June 16, 2022 (with an unusual retroactive provision, i.e. the extension was issued after the original approval had expired), and he did so with no public process, a move that was harshly criticized by Delaware Riverkeeper.

The DRBC extension is particularly egregious, given NJ Gov. Murphy’s high profile public vow to do everything in his power to stop the project. (NJ Spotlight wrote:

“The Administration, however, remains unwavering in its commitment to continue advancing critical initiatives to protect the environment and public health for future generations. It will explore all avenues within its authority to prevent the use of this dock for LNG transport,” the statement said. Murphy did not say how he would do that.

His vow to block the project came after his DEP issued permits to approve the project.

Gov. Murphy is a Co-Chair of the Commission – his DEP Commissioner is a voting member (which raised obvious ethical conflict and recusal issues, given DEP Commissioner LaTourette’s legal work for the project in securing DEP permits).

Obviously, DRBC denial of the extension request was a regulatory opportunity to block the project.

There is no way DRBC Executive Director Tambini would have issued this extension on his own without consulting with Gov. Murphy’s Office, with his DEP Commissioner, or over the objection of Gov. Murphy or DEP, so the extension itself is compelling evidence that Gov. Murphy’s opposition is not genuine.

The fact that Fortress Energy remains committed to the project and continue to spend a lot of money developing the project is also compelling evidence that that have no fear of Gov. Murphy’s threat to kill the project.

The Fortress commitments and DRBC approval make a mockery of Gov. Murphy’s gestures to stop the project.

As we revealed, Gov. Murphy’s DEP Commissioner Shawn Latourette was the lead lawyer for the Fortress LNG project to secure DEP permits and he was installed at DEP just 2 weeks after leaving his law firm legal post for Fortress.

The Tambini secret extension is another example of special treatment and secrecy on this project, see:

None of this could have occurred if Gov. Murphy seriously wanted to kill the project.

So, why did the Delaware Riverkeeper’s scathing press release not even mention Gov. Murphy and instead punched down and targeted ED Tambini, and not Gov. Murphy?

That’s just another example of the lame lapdogs in the NJ climate activist community.

Where is the NJ press corps? Where is legislative oversight to hold the Gov. accountable?

[End Note:  I learned of the DRBC extension this morning in an email from Catskill Mountainkeeper. The mis-focused headline says it all: “BREAKING NEWS– DRBC Executive Director Breaks Protocol”

While they do mention the powerful NY State climate law (which NJ does not have), unfortunately they follow Riverkeeper’s lead and target ED Tambini with No mention of NJ Gov. Murphy or NY Gov: (red highlight mine, boldface in original)

New York State’s nation-leading climate law–the Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act (CLCPA)–clearly states that the approval of all new construction and development here must take climate impacts into consideration. The DRBC’s quiet approval of this permit extension behind closed doors not only violates public trust and governmental transparency, but also goes against the guidelines laid out in the CLCPA by supporting the fossil fuel industry’s behind-the-scenes dealings in toxic oil and gas. Mountainkeeper is extremely disappointed and concerned about this breach in protocol by Mr. Tambini, and we are working with our allies at Delaware Riverkeeper Network to hold the DRBC accountable.

Both groups need to hold their Governors accountable, not the puppet Tambini!

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Pacific Madrone

August 12th, 2022 No comments

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Lovely tree.

Puget Sound backdrop.

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