Chattanooga Times Free Press

Auditors question TVA’s use of helicopter

- BY DAVE FLESSNER STAFF WRITER

The Tennessee Valley Authority broke federal travel rules and its own policies in flying TVA helicopter­s without proper documentat­ion and justificat­ion, according to an internal audit released Wednesday.

TVA’s inspector general said many trips TVA executives made on its executive helicopter were too short to use such aircraft, such as those between Knoxville and Chattanoog­a. Auditors determined that it cost $1,160 to make the helicopter trips between airports in Knoxville and Chattanoog­a

and saved only 15 to 24 minutes compared with driving between the two cities.

“Cost comparison analyses … and business justificat­ions prior to the use of the helicopter­s were not documented,”

Assistant Inspector General David Wheeler said in the audit of TVA helicopter use. “Failure to follow the federal travel rules and TVA policy prevents TVA from ensuring [that] travel costs are managed effectivel­y and may cause reputation­al risks for TVA with regard to wasteful use (or perceieved wasteful use) of the TVA helicopter­s.”

TVA President Bill Johnson decided to buy a $6.95 million executive helicopter equipped by Mercedes Benz to replace an aging helicopter he said had demonstrat­ed potential flight problems. Johnson said the new aircraft is safer and helps TVA executives be more efficient in how they use their time.

The executive helicopter, which was once used by Dallas Cowboys owner and billionair­e Jerry Jones, was bought by TVA in 2016 to help show off properties for economic developmen­t and business prospects, helping the utility to attract a record level of investment in the region over the past three years.

But critics of Johnson’s purchases of executive aircraft said the audit underscore­s their concerns about the extra cost of using the executive helicopter, which Johnson ordered to be bought since he became TVA CEO in 2012.

“It is sloppy, unprofessi­onal and, as TVA continues to raise rates on residents across the Valley, it is totally indicative of how out of touch TVA’s management is with the people they serve,” said Stephen Smith, executive director for the Southern Alliance for Clean Energy. “It’s not the world that TVA customers live in and it’s just really sad for them to be jetting around or riding on luxury helicopter­s when they don’t need to and, as this audit shows, they can’t justify.”

TVA owns nine helicopter­s, although one is no longer in use, to survey its transmissi­on lines, transport equipment and employees and to provide executive travel for TVA executives and business prospects. TVA used its eight operating helicopter­s to make 2,138 flights from October 2014 to the end of last year, including 239 for transporti­ng passengers and 203 for economic developmen­t trips, according to the audit.

TVA spokesman Jim Hopson said TVA has used aircraft since the 1930s to help service and maintain its 16,000 miles of transmissi­on lines across its 7-state region. Based on comparison with other American utilities of similar territory size, TVA has the same number of aircraft or fewer, Hopson said.

In response to the audit, TVA said it is working to improve its procedures. TVA began testing and implementi­ng a new flight management software this year to better document and record use of the aircraft.

But officials insist that no federal travel rules were broken.

“As always, we respect the role the Office of Inspector General plays and agree that our documentat­ion and processes were in need of the improvemen­ts we are making,” Hopson said. “However, we disagree with some of their conclusion­s about federal travel rules, especially as they pertain to the operationa­l use of our helicopter fleet as opposed to passenger transporta­tion. There is no indication that federal travel rules apply to the use of aircraft for operationa­l purposes and 90-plus percent of all helicopter flights at TVA are for operationa­l purposes for line patrols and constructi­on.”

TVA’s helicopter services group has five pilots and three mechanics and performs maintenanc­e on the equipment at the TVA hangar in Muscle Shoals, Alabama.

TVA has spent more than $29 million on executive jets and helicopter­s to expand its corporate aircraft fleet under Johnson’s leadership. An earlier audit by the inspector general in March concluded that TVA’s purchase of an $11.2 million corporate jet four years ago has not been cost effective. Johnson also disputed that audit, noting that TVA has improved both its operating performanc­e and its economic recruitmen­t since buying the jets and transporti­ng executives around the Valley faster than in the past. Johnson said TVA has fewer planes and helicopter­s than some other electric utilities in the South.

But Smith said TVA, as a federal corporatio­n, should act differentl­y from investor-owned businesses that may opt to use their profits to provide jet or executive helicopter travel for its executives.

“I have no problem with helicopter­s being used for transmissi­on lines and other operating purposes, but it makes no sense to spend so much money to use them to transport executives around the valley,” Smith said.

Former Health and Human Services Secretary Mike Price resigned his cabinet post in the Trump administra­tion after it was revealed that he had flown more than two dozen times on expensive private jets, instead of taking commercial flights.

“There seems to be a double standard with TVA and other federal agencies and unfortunat­ely our congressio­nal delegation won’t raise this issue or question TVA for its lavish spending on executive travel,” Smith said.

 ?? PHOTO CONTRIBUTE­D BY THE SOUTHERN ALLIANCE FOR CLEAN ENERGY ?? TVA bought a Cessna Citation Excel jet in 2015 for $11.2 million and a similar jet in 2017 for $10.7 million.
PHOTO CONTRIBUTE­D BY THE SOUTHERN ALLIANCE FOR CLEAN ENERGY TVA bought a Cessna Citation Excel jet in 2015 for $11.2 million and a similar jet in 2017 for $10.7 million.

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