Cooper, ACP subcommittee chairs face off over interviewing state employees | Eastern North Carolina Now

Gov. Roy Cooper's administration told legislative leaders investigating the Atlantic Coast Pipeline last week it won't allow private investigators hired by the General Assembly to interview state employees.

ENCNow
    Publisher's note: This post appears here courtesy of the Carolina Journal, and written by Don Carrington.

Governor refuses to let employees be interviewed by investigators; lawmakers plan to let interviews proceed

    Gov. Roy Cooper's administration told legislative leaders investigating the Atlantic Coast Pipeline last week it won't allow private investigators hired by the General Assembly to interview state employees.

    The investigators are former federal agents who were hired in December by a special ACP subcommittee to look into the ACP permit process and the creation of a $57.8 million discretionary fund Cooper would control. The General Assembly created the subcommittee in September. The investigators' duties include reviewing documents and interviewing state employees and others associated with the project.

    Subcommittee chairmen Sen. Harry Brown, R-Onslow, and Rep. Dean Arp, R-Union, responded today to Cooper. They plan to proceed with interviews, which could lead to a showdown between the legislature and the governor regarding the General Assembly's oversight authority.

    "Given your administration's repeated emphasis that nothing untoward transpired, we do not know why you would obstruct this investigation by forbidding state employees from speaking with the Subcommittee or its staff. The independent investigators will be in touch with prospective interviewees to schedule a conversation at a time and venue that is most convenient for the interviewee," said Brown and Arp.

    The letter by Cooper's Chief of Staff Kristi Jones and by Brown and Arp were published earlier today by WRAL. They can be found here and here.

    Jones' letter, dated Jan. 17, said the Department of Environmental Quality and Cooper's administration have been cooperative with the legislature and "produced tens of thousands of documents in response to public records requests on December 20, 2018."

    "However, we have directed Cabinet level agencies to respectfully decline these outside investigators' requests for interviews. There are no protections for state employees from inappropriate questions and no rules preventing these private contractors from using underhanded or even illegal methods to interrogate," she said.

    She characterized the interviews as an "extraordinary open-ended political fishing expedition conducted by Republican former federal investigators."

    Brown and Arp took exception to Jones' characterization. "We are deeply disappointed that you chose to impugn the character of career federal law enforcement officials as cover in your effort to shield the public from the truth of your administration's dealings," their letter said.

    The lawmakers also raised the issue of Cooper's business relationship with Strata Solar, a relationship started in 2012 and first reported by Carolina Journal last year. Cooper, while serving as state attorney general, agreed to lease a 40-acre Nash County property he and his brother owned to Strata for the construction and operation of a 4.9-megawatt solar facility.

    Brown and Arp said:

    These facts appear to be true: Your business partner asked you to personally intervene with Duke Energy on a matter impacting his solar company profits that is unrelated to the ACP. You then met one-on-one with Duke Energy CEO Lynn Good and discussed your business partner's request and the ACP permit. Several weeks later, when your General Counsel informed you that he intended to sign a critical document related to the ACP, you asked. 'where are the solar boys on their deal?' The deal with the solar boys was not yet complete. The critical ACP agreement and the permit were delayed for weeks until the solar deal providing your business partner with increased profits was on more certain footing because of your intervention.

    Governor's ACP discretionary fund

    Cooper's office announced the $57.8 million discretionary fund immediately after the state Department of Environmental Quality announced it approved a critical water quality permit for the ACP. Both announcements were made Jan. 26, 2018. The Memorandum of Understanding between the governor's office and the four utilities building the pipeline (including Duke) said the money would be used to mitigate environmental impacts of the pipeline; for economic development projects in the affected counties; and for renewable energy projects in the affected counties.

    CJ was the first news organization to note the unusual arrangement. It was created outside normal legislative budgeting functions. Several legislators said Cooper violated the separation-of-powers doctrine in the state constitution, which says all state spending must be authorized by the General Assembly. (See CJ's series on the ACP at this link.)

    In February, the legislature voted to redirect the ACP discretionary fund to the school systems in the eight counties crossed by the pipeline. To date, the state has received no money.
Go Back

HbAD0

Latest State and Federal

"She’s trying to con the public like she did a good job at the border when, in fact, she has destroyed the very fabric of our Nation..."
Unbeknownst to Hezbollah, Israel had been secretly manufacturing the pagers that Hezbollah was buying for years.
Ohio Republican said the rhetoric coming from the political Left is "out of control."
North Carolina Treasury Secretary Dale Folwell, and now, challenging for the seat of North Carolina's governor visits with Eastern North Carolina NOW's publisher, Stan Deatherage, to discuss the multiple jobs of the Secretary, his commitment to performance, and that lurking elected position hence.
Any “bounce” that Vice President Kamala Harris may have gotten from last month’s Democratic National Convention (DNC) appears to have evaporated, according to the most recent New York Times/Siena poll out on Sunday.
ABC News released the rules on Wednesday that both Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump and Democrat presidential nominee Kamala Harris have agreed to ahead of next week’s debate.

HbAD1

Vice President Kamala Harris played a key role in the pressure campaign to keep Israel out of the Gazan city of Rafah months before an American hostage was found dead on Sunday.
The Israeli military found Hersh Goldberg-Polin, a 23-year-old American-Israeli taken by Hamas from The Nova Music Festival in October, and five other hostages murdered by Hamas in Gaza on Sunday.
Despite not holding any major interviews or press conferences since becoming the Democrats’ de facto nominee, Vice President Kamala Harris’ favorability rating has skyrocketed with the help of positive media coverage since President Joe Biden left the race on July 21.
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump blasted the Kamala Harris campaign on Monday for pushing to change the rules for the upcoming ABC News debate, saying that Harris and her team are looking for a way to “get out” of the event.
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump buried the hatchet with Georgia Governor Brian Kemp (R) this week after the two have repeatedly clashed at various points over the last few years.
PBS News reporter Judy Woodruff issued a retraction on Wednesday after she falsely reported at the Democratic National Convention (DNC) that Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump was trying to sabotage a hostage deal between Hamas and Israel

HbAD2

An Axios reporter rushed to the defense of Vice President Kamala Harris’ heavily criticized proposal to control grocery prices on Tuesday, but her article was hit by a community note on X that provided some important context.

HbAD3

 
Back to Top