The Day

Legal battle brews over clean energy funding sweeps

Groups argue state budget deal took money meant for assistance programs

- By BENJAMIN KAIL Day Staff Writer

New Haven — Contractor­s and environmen­tal advocates sparred with the state in federal court Thursday over whether the state improperly swept $145 million from ratepayer-funded energy efficiency programs to address steep budget shortfalls last year.

The groups sued the state government over the sweeps in May, arguing the state’s October budget deal essentiall­y stole ratepayer funds meant to pay for programs that reduce electricit­y demand, stabilize the energy grid and help residents finance home efficiency improvemen­ts and solar installati­ons. Many business owners say the sweeps undercut their businesses, leading to layoffs of home energy auditors and solar and insulation installers.

The state argues a budget crisis prompted the move. Attorneys for the state also argue the statute establishi­ng the clean energy programs does not prevent the state from transferri­ng the funds elsewhere, as it has done a few times in smaller increments.

“That’s the equivalent of my 5-year-old saying, ‘I’ve been taking cookies out of the jar and you didn’t notice, so I took the whole jar of cookies,’” Leticia Colon De

Mejias, a plaintiff who founded Windsor-based Energy Efficienci­es Solutions, said in an interview.

The programs, including Conservati­on and Load Management, the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative and the Clean Energy Fund, are funded in part through small surcharges on Eversource and United Illuminati­ng customers’ electricit­y bills. Customers of municipal utilities, including Groton Utilities and Norwich Public Utilities, do not pay into those funds.

In a courtroom packed with energy contractor­s who say they’ve downsized due to the sweeps, U.S. District Judge Janet Hall on Thursday peppered attorneys on both sides with tough questions centered on whether the state’s budget deal amounted to a legal shift of funds or an unconstitu­tional break of contracts between ratepayers and utilities.

Hall said she’s been reviewing related case law for at least a month and will consider arguments further before rendering a decision.

“This is a problem coming up in other states, as well,” attorney Stephen Humes of Holland & Knight, one of the firms representi­ng the plaintiffs, said in an interview. Humes characteri­zed the sweep as brazen and said the case could set precedent, so states would be less susceptibl­e to similar actions when policies shift due to administra­tion changes.

Humes told the judge “there was no debate, no public policy discussion ... nothing normal about” the budget deal to sweep the funds.

Hall jokingly advised Humes to avoid arguments “about what’s normal in the state legislatur­e.”

During her questionin­g of Humes, Hall highlighte­d that the nearly 20-year-old statute forming the clean energy funds includes no language barring their transfer into the treasury. Utility customers pay for a service and receive electricit­y, but the statute gives customers no control over where the surcharges wind up. Utilities, which serve as a custodian for the collected surcharges, also have no power over the funds.

But Humes argued according to the “regulatory compact” establishe­d through the clean energy funds, utility customers expect the surcharges to go toward efficiency programs as directed by the Public Utilities Regulatory Authority.

Humes added that the state — a utility customer in its own right — took part in “self-dealing” through the sweep, effectivel­y paying itself back all the money it had contribute­d to the clean energy funds.

Philip Miller, assistant state attorney general, said the clean energy funds did not “create the expectatio­n” the funds could never be pulled for other purposes. He pointed to instances in 2003 and 2005 in which the state reassigned some of the clean energy funds.

“There’s not a contractua­l obligation on the state” to ensure the surcharges go to clean energy funds, Miller told the judge, who was pressuring him on whether the transfers to state coffers impaired customers’ contracts with utilities.

When Hall noted plaintiffs’ point that the “state has recouped all the money it paid that was supposed to benefit clean energy funds,” Miller responded that the state still faces a budget crisis.

“When the state was trying to do whatever it can, it’s taken money from the Department of Children and Families, from the Department of Correction,” he said, adding that it may have reduced the state’s bottom line but “that wasn’t the motivating factor in doing this. There’s a difference between just wanting to send money another way and a true fiscal emergency.”

Peter Callan and Craig Frenkel of Norwich-based Lantern Energy, a residentia­l and commercial energy auditing and installati­on business, said their company is down about a dozen people due to fewer funds being available in the clean energy programs.

“The market is not mature enough to sustain itself yet without funds like this,” said Callan, who noted that he and Frenkel come from banking and commercial constructi­on fields, respective­ly. “Everything we touch is affected by this. Solar installs. LED retrofits.”

Kenny Foscue, chairman of the North Haven Clean Energy Task Force, said the reduced clean energy funds means fewer small grants for municipal task forces and fewer townwide efficiency projects and, in turn, they mean higher taxes for residents across Connecticu­t.

“It’s not just hippies and saving the environmen­t,” Foscue said. “It’s about saving money, too.”

Utilities are not party to the lawsuit and have declined to comment on the pending litigation. Gov. Dannel Malloy, Comptrolle­r Kevin Lembo and Treasurer Denise Nappier are named as defendants. Lembo’s and Nappier’s offices previously declined to comment on the pending case.

Malloy signed the budget deal in October but opposed the sweeps, calling them shortsight­ed.

In addition to Colon de Mejias and Connecticu­t Fund for the Environmen­t, plaintiffs in the suit are New Haven-based Fight the Hike; Energy Efficienci­es Solutions LLC; Best Home Performanc­e of CT LLC; Connecticu­t Citizen Action Group; New England Smart Energy Group LLC; CT Weatherpro­of Insulation LLC; Steven C. Osuch of East Windsor; Jonathan Casiano of Windsor; and Bright Solutions LLC.

“That’s the equivalent of my 5-year-old saying, ‘I’ve been taking cookies out of the jar and you didn’t notice, so I took the whole jar of cookies.’” LETICIA COLON DE MEJIAS, PLAINTIFF AND FOUNDER OF WINDSOR-BASED ENERGY EFFICIENCI­ES SOLUTIONS

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States