Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Lobbyist sought EPA staff job for friend

- By Juliet Eilperin and Brady Dennis

The lobbyist’s wife rented Scott Pruitt a room at a discounted rate, then made job pitch, emails show.

WASHINGTON — The lobbyist whose wife rented Environmen­tal Protection Agency Administra­tor Scott Pruitt a room in a Capitol Hill condo at a discounted rate lobbied Pruitt’s chief of staff to hire a family friend, according to recently released agency emails.

Steven Hart, who served as chairman of the law firm Williams and Jensen until earlier this year, contacted Pruitt’s chief of staff, Ryan Jackson, on administra­tion policies affecting his clients and potential appointmen­ts to the EPA’s scientific advisory boards and possible agency hires. The emails, released in response to a lawsuit by the Sierra Club, an environmen­tal advocacy group, show that both Hart and his wife — who rented Pruitt a condo for $50 a night, which he paid only on nights he stayed there — pushed for the EPA to hire Jimmy Guilliano, a recent college graduate.

“I seldom talk to Scott but Vicki does,” Hart wrote to Jackson. “She has talked to Scott about this kid who is important to us. He told Vicki to talk to you about how to handle this. I am not sure personally that this is a good idea for Jimmy unless he is working near you. Sticking him down in the bowels is death at EPA. His family is all Naval Academy by the way.”

In an email Sunday, EPA spokesman Jahan Wilcox said that the agency did not hire Guilliano and that the agency stands by its previous statement that Hart did not lobby the agency.

“The Agency accepts career recommenda­tions from a number of acquaintan­ces. Ultimately, Mr. Guilliano was not hired,” Wilcox wrote, adding that when it came to Hart’s other correspond­ence with Jackson, “Many of these emails were unsolicite­d and did not impact any Agency policy outcomes.”

This spring, Hart said in interview with The Washington Post and other outlets that he did no EPA lobbying during 2017 or 2018, but his former firm amended his lobbying disclosure documents this month to reflect that he worked on behalf of CocaCola, the Financial Oversight and Management Control Board of Puerto Rico and Smithfield Foods.

The emails show that the lobbyist repeatedly contacted Jackson on several topics, asking him to arrange meetings for his clients and place allies of his in different EPA jobs.

Hart worked to place candidates on the agency’s Scientific Advisory Board, which helps guide the EPA’s research, though those efforts did not appear to bear fruit. Pruitt revamped the membership of several EPA advisory panels last fall, adding officials allied with industry groups while barring any researcher­s from serving if they were simultaneo­usly receiving EPA grants.

Wilcox said the candidates Hart had suggested “were not considered.”

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