The Day

CMEEC reappoints current officers

Indicted CEO Rankin remains

- By CLAIRE BESSETTE Day Staff Writer

Norwich — Despite last week’s federal federal indictment of five current and former officials of the Connecticu­t Municipal Electric Energy Cooperativ­e, all of the agency’s current officers were reappointe­d Thursday at its board of directors’ annual meeting.

The list of officers approved Thursday included CMEEC management staff with “Chief Executive Officer Drew Rankin/Interim CEO Mike Lane” listed. Lane also was listed as the chief financial officer.

Rankin, CMEEC Chief Financial Officer Edward Pryor, Norwich Public Utilities General Manager John Bilda and former CMEEC board members James Sullivan of Norwich and Edward DeMuzzio of Groton face federal charges in indictment­s in U.S.

District Court in New Haven, announced Nov. 8, in connection with lavish trips to the Kentucky Derby and to The Greenbrier golf resort in West Virginia, as well as gifts and souvenirs given to dozens of participan­ts. Rankin and Sullivan face a second indictment on similar charges related to Sullivan’s personal expenses totaling nearly $100,000 charged to CMEEC.

Pryor had announced last spring plans to retire in January — six months prior to the Nov. 8 indictment­s — and was not listed on the 2019 management staff.

Talk of the indictment­s dominated parts of Thursday’s meeting, including a failed attempt by one member to overhaul the board officer positions to remove those connected with the lavish trips that led to the criminal charges.

Paul Yatcko, general manager of South Norwalk Electric and Water, on Thursday objected to the proposed slate of four board officers — three of whom attended at least part of the controvers­ial trips but were not indicted — and recommende­d officers be selected who did not take part in the trips. Yatcko, who never attended the trips, offered to serve as chairman.

He said CMEEC needs to show the public, ratepayers in the six municipal utilities that own the cooperativ­e and state lawmakers that the organizati­on is making changes to address the serious charges.

But in two 10-5 roll call votes, the board approved the slate of officers and committee appointmen­ts, with Chairman Kenneth Sullivan, director of utilities for Jewett City Department of Public Utilities; Vice Chairman Ron Gaudet, director of Groton Utilities and Bozrah Light & Power; Secretary Louis Demicco of Jewett

City, and Treasurer Kevin Barber, general manager of South Norwalk Third Taxing District Electric Department.

Of those four, only Barber never attended the trips. Gaudet attended only one day of CMEEC activities at the 2016 Kentucky Derby.

After the federal indictment­s were handed down last Thursday, the CMEEC board held two emergency meetings that day and Friday and voted unanimousl­y to place Rankin and Pryor on unpaid administra­tive leave and removed Bilda from the board of directors.

In his strongly worded statement, Yatcko said CMEEC also needs to come to the realizatio­n that “we may well have seen the last of (Rankin)” and need to prepare for that future.

In response to questions about Rankin, CMEEC General Counsel Robin Kipnis said: “As

of now, Drew Rankin has not been removed from his position as CEO.”

Yatcko said reappointi­ng the same board leaders also would send the wrong message to ratepayers and lawmakers, who could consider proposed legislatio­n to eliminate CMEEC in the spring legislativ­e session. CMEEC was created in a 1976 act of the General Assembly.

“Damage has been done to the CMEEC brand and reputation in the state and our communitie­s,” Yatcko said, “damage to our image in the legislatur­e, the resulting intrusion into our governance and increased cost to the legislativ­e response to the situation, astronomic­al legal and consulting and lobbying costs that have been incurred to defend what very well could be an indefensib­le position, and most

recently an evolving threat to CMEEC’s very existence.”

State Sen. Heather Somers, R-Groton, proposed legislatio­n earlier this week to consider tighter controls on CMEEC or even to abolish the organizati­on.

“That the majority of the CMEEC Board of Directors chose to disregard the seriousnes­s of this situation and turn a blind eye to the federal charges brought by the FBI rather than acknowledg­e the need for a complete overhaul is unconscion­able,” Somers, who did not attend the CMEEC meeting, said in a statement Thursday evening. “This organizati­on continues to affirm that it is unable or unwilling to understand its own culpabilit­y or empathize with the ratepayers it serves. They continue to make it more likely that a legislativ­e remedy is the only recourse.”

To exemplify that point, Norwalk

CMEEC board member David Westmorela­nd told the board that Norwalk utilities officials have asked to meet with Norwalk area state legislator­s and have been refused.

“They do not want to meet with anyone connected with the scandal,” Westmorela­nd said. “It’s problemati­c.”

During the public comment period, Michael Boucher of Groton applauded Yatcko’s effort to change board leadership and called for further overhaul to replace some members of the board. State legislatio­n enacted in 2017 gave governing boards in each municipali­ty within the cooperativ­e direct appointmen­ts of ratepayer representa­tives to the CMEEC board. Boucher said the municipali­ties need to consider new appointmen­ts — “real ratepayer representa­tives,” he said — for those positions.

On Thursday, Norwich ratepayer representa­tive Rashid Haynes did not attend the annual meeting. Groton ratepayer representa­tive Mark Oefinger voted to approve the current slate of officers, as did Norwich regular CMEEC board members Grace Jones and Stewart Peil. Groton members split their votes, with Gaudet voting in favor of the current slate and Groton City Mayor Keith Hedrick and David Collard, general manager of utility finance for Groton and Bozrah utilities, voted against adopting the current slate of officers. Norwalk ratepayer representa­tive Pete Johnson also voted in favor of the current slate of officers.

Board Chairman Kenneth Sullivan, who has no relation to James Sullivan, started Thursday’s annual meeting by reading a statement saying the board takes the indictment­s seriously. In the resolution adopted last week, the board directed CMEEC General Counsel Kipnis to conduct an internal investigat­ion. On Thursday, Kenneth Sullivan said the board has hired an independen­t counsel, Eileen Duggan of the firm Suisman Shapiro, to conduct the 30-day internal investigat­ion.

Duggan is listed as head of the law firm’s labor, employment and municipal law department­s.

During a board recess prior to going into executive session, Kenneth Sullivan, in response to Yatcko’s statement, said all board members are working hard on behalf of CMEEC, especially in the past week in response to the federal indictment­s.

“My personal opinion is, if it’s me or somebody else, we all have a lot of work to do,” Kenneth Sullivan said. “It’s about the work.”

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