Larry DeVilbiss

Welcome to my blog about the business of MEA. It is my intent to share my opinions about our board decisions. I welcome comments but will only publish comments that identify real people with a phone number I can contact.

You can contribute to my campaign by sending a check to:

Larry DeVilbiss
2300 N. Aurora Lane
Palmer, Alaska 99645

You can call me at 746 6593 or e mail me at carrots@mtaonline.net

Thursday, April 1, 2010

Costly Decisions



Let me illustrate how in the last year and a half the composition of the board yielded to special interests at the expense of the broader membership.

 There was a motion at a board meeting Sept 8, 2008 to stop supporting the advertising to repeal the Borough ordinance that imposed California style permitting restrictions  on all power generation in the borough that exceeded 20 megawatts.  Two independent reviews of that study indicated that the cost of that single ordinance alone would be $9 million dollars over the thirty years life of a generation plant.  The annual expense of complying with the permit alone was over $500 thousand dollars.  Director Katie Hurley put it on the agenda and Director Janet Kincaid made the motion.  With almost no debate and without answering my question, "How is this motion in the interest of MEA?", the motion passed with only David Glines and David Dahms and myself dissenting.  Subsequently, after skillful manipulation of the language on the ballot by the borough attorney, and tens of thousands of dollars spent by out of state environmental agencies in alignment with Friends of Mat Su, the Borough vote to repeal failed.

You can year the audio of this part of the meeting here- it gives a lot of insight to the dynamics of the board:   Borough Power Plant Repeal audio.

Now for another example of costly special interest voting.  Just before the last annual meeting (Feb 9, 09), the board voted to give the IBEW linemen a 24% raise over 4 years.  Normally actions of this magnitude are thoroughly debated.  With almost no comment, the motion passed- again, with only David Glines and myself in dissent.  The five yes votes were not surprisingly all Directors put on the board with the endorsement of the IBEW.  Two of them were actively in a campaign for their seats with the help of the IBEW at the time of the vote.  They got elected and the union got its inflated raise in an economic environment that was actually  deflating.