FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Letter to Attorney General Loretta Lynch cites potential legal and ethical violations of federal law
SALT LAKE CITY‒Conservation, health, and good government groups today sent a letter to U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch calling for a formal investigation into potential legal and ethical violations in Utah’s extraordinary $53 million taxpayer-funded loan to build a deepwater terminal in Oakland, California, to export coal.
The letter, which also was addressed to Gregory J. Gould, director of the Office of Natural Resources Revenue, and Mary Kendall, interim inspector general of the Department of the Interior, cites Utah’s misuse of federal community development funds and the elaborate web of potential conflicts of interest that propelled the scheme through state agency and legislative approval processes with scant public scrutiny.
"It’s staggering that the Legislature and Governor were willing to throw tens of millions in taxpayer money at a project so rife with conflicts of interest,” said Michael Shea, policy associate at HEAL Utah. “It is very clear that someone from the outside should take a careful look at this."
The letter lays out the twists and turns in the decades-long effort to export Utah coal overseas through a Pacific port. Several Utah counties began seeking funding to build transport operations to export coal from mines owned by Bowie Resource Holding Partners as early as 2001. In late 2014, in a deal brokered by Jeffrey Holt, a private investment banker, “strategic infrastructure advisor” to the counties and then-chairman of the Utah Transportation Commission, the counties requested a $53 million loan from Utah’s Community Impact Board to finance the terminal.
The Community Impact Board (CIB) is charged with administering proceeds from the royalties to the state under the federal Mineral Leasing Act (MLA). The Act restricts the use of the money to community planning, construction and maintenance of public facilities, and provision of public services to mitigate the adverse impacts of mining on the communities.
The Community Impact Board approved the loan, and then, when questions arose about the misuse of funds, the 2016 legislature gave fast-track approval to Senate Bill 246, a procedure designed to evade the Mineral Leasing Act’s funding limitations by swapping state general fund money with Mineral Leasing Act money for the loan.
“It is inconceivable that this is an intended or proper use of $53 million of MLA, CIB or taxpayer funds and this appears to represent the worst kind of corporate cronyism that members of the Utah legislature are usually so fond of rallying against,” said Joshua Kanter, board chair of the Alliance for a Better Utah. “Diverting these funds is not only improper but will leave these communities without the money they really need to help them retool their economic base as the coal industry continues its decline. There has been no showing that there is a shortage of available port capacity for Utah coal or that exporting Utah coal to Asia makes economic sense, either of which is easily addressed by the free-market without this shell-game and abuse of the public trust.”
Many of the bill’s proponents in the legislature and the governor who signed the bill had received campaign contributions from Bowie, the coal company expected to be the largest beneficiary of the export terminal deal. At the same time, Strategic Infrastructure Advisor Jeffrey Holt and his investment firm could reap millions if the project is completed.
“From the very beginning, the proposal to use Utah taxpayer resources to prop up an out-of-state coal export terminal has never had the best interest of Utahns at heart,” said Lindsay Beebe, Utah organizing representative for the Sierra Club’s Beyond Coal campaign. “We need to develop real solutions to help our communities as our state transitions away from coal. Instead, our public officials have shown that they are more eager to hand out political favors than to help Utah communities across the state that deserve our support."
Meanwhile in California, public records and media reports revealed that Holt and port developer Phil Tagami attempted to conceal the plan to ship coal through the Oakland terminal, instead emphasizing that it would be used to ship agricultural products.
Many residents near the terminal, who already are burdened by significant air pollution, have vocally opposed coal shipments through their communities due to the environmental and public health impacts.
The Oakland City Council is meeting June 27 to consider placing “health and safety” restrictions on the operation of any coal terminal in the city. Utah’s legislation to transfer $53 million in state funds for the project also goes into effect July 1, lending increased urgency to the call for a federal investigation.
Under the Mineral Leasing Act, the U.S. attorney general has broad authority to seek judicial relief when violations are uncovered.
The Department of the Interior is charged with investigating and auditing the use of royalties under the act, and has the duty to ensure the integrity and accountability of its programs through the Office of the Inspector General.
“SB 246 is a blatant attempt to circumvent the Mineral Leasing Act’s funding limitations,” said Chris Eaton, an attorney with Earthjustice. “The actions of Utah officials demonstrate that additional federal oversight is necessary to prevent this misuse of taxpayer dollars.”
The groups hope to meet with Justice and Interior Department officials in the coming weeks to discuss the letter.
“The contents of this letter require an external review by several oversight bodies,” said Tom Sanzillo, director of finance for the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis, and former first deputy comptroller for New York State. “I spent seventeen years in senior management of local and state government oversight agencies. The economic, fiscal, financial, environmental, governance, ethical and political red flags raised by the State of Utah’s actions are too numerous to ignore."
John Weisheit, co-founder of Living Rivers, added, “The Utah State Legislature and the Community Impact Board are laundering public money through the State Transportation Fund to provide financial assistance to energy corporations, and not to communities where it truly belongs. To bear this behavior from elected and appointed officials to me, as a Utah taxpayer, is embarrassing, and an audit is, at best, a minimalist request that should be honored.”
The request for federal investigation is just one part of a multi-pronged effort to protect Oakland from dirty coal shipments. In addition to pressing the Oakland City Council to adopt health and safety regulations for the proposed Oakland coal terminal, Oakland residents and other concerned citizens are supporting legislation pending in the California State Legislature which would require additional environmental review for this type of terminal project and bring more transparency to project funding.
“From the start, the plan to use Utah’s community-impact funds to make a risky investment in the coal industry has looked suspicious,” said Aaron Paul, staff attorney for the Grand Canyon Trust. “We hope that an inquiry by the federal government will help steer those funds back where they belong—in Utah’s communities.”
The letter was sent on behalf of Alliance for a Better Utah, HEAL Utah, the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis, Sierra Club, Center for Biological Diversity, Grand Canyon Trust, Earthjustice (on behalf of Sierra Club and Grand Canyon Trust), Living Rivers, and The Sloan Law Firm (on behalf of Living Rivers).