The Oklahoman

The Wind Coalition loses member over accusation­s

- Staff Writer nclay@oklahoman.com BY NOLAN CLAY

A clean energy company dropped out of The Wind Coalition this year after a legislator made accusation­s about a tracking device found on his pickup, The Oklahoman has learned.

The Chicago-based company, Invenergy, is building a massive wind farm in Oklahoma’s Panhandle that will be the largest in America and the second largest in the world once operationa­l in 2020.

Issues involving the $4.5 billion Wind Catcher project are now before the Oklahoma Corporatio­n Commission.

“Invenergy terminated its membership in The Wind Coalition last month when allegation­s surfaced in the media,” the company’s communicat­ions director said Friday.

“Invenergy has no knowledge as to whether the allegation­s are true or false,” communicat­ions director Patrick Whitty said. “This was a business decision to minimize unnecessar­y distractio­n during the Wind Catcher proceeding and as important decisions are being made about the future of wind energy in Oklahoma.”

Invenergy had been a longtime member of The Wind Coalition, a trade associatio­n formed more than a dozen years ago to promote the developmen­t of wind energy as a power source.

A state representa­tive who has been at odds

with The Wind Coalition found a GPS tracker hidden underneath his pickup the evening of Dec. 4.

Rep. Mark McBride told both Moore police and the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigat­ion he suspects the wind industry was having him followed. An OSBI special agent is investigat­ing his accusation­s.

“I had word from a source that they were trying to dig into my life,” McBride told a police officer. “Anything they could find on me, having an affair, or just anything.”

McBride, R-Moore, has been one of the most outspoken critics of tax breaks given to the wind industry. “It is time for Big Wind to pay its taxes, just like the rest of us,” he wrote in a newspaper opinion piece last year.

A bill capping wind tax credits at $35 million a year is now working its way through the Legislatur­e.

The OSBI investigat­ion so far has determined that a Texas political consultant hired the Oklahoma private investigat­ors who put the tracker on McBride’s pickup.

The OSBI special agent is now trying to determine who hired political consultant George Shipley, whose nickname is “Dr. Dirt.”

The Wind Coalition is based in Austin, Texas. Years ago, the coalition and Shipley’s company had offices in the same building. The Wind Coalition’s president has denied any involvemen­t in having the legislator followed.

“I have not hired, nor has The Wind Coalition hired, any entity, including Mr. Shipley, to conduct opposition research on candidates or officehold­ers,” Jeff Clark said Feb. 28.

The Wind Coalition is not currently listing its members on its website, as it has in the past. But officials said membership is up, not down.

“Overall, membership in The Wind Coalition throughout our eightstate region has increased in the first quarter of 2018,” the Oklahoma executive director, Mark Yates, said Friday.

“Membership investment and renewal is strong as wind industry-based companies, investors and manufactur­ers benefit from working

together to expand the industry and encourage even more corporatio­ns to transition its operations to a renewable energy source,” Yates

said.

Coalition members will be at the Capitol in Oklahoma City on Wednesday for OK WindPower Day. Joining them will be

landowners, county officials and school superinten­dents.

Shipley has refused to talk to the media. He had been subpoenaed to

appear before Oklahoma’s multicount­y grand jury March 6 but a Texas judge ruled he did not have to come.

McBride sued Shipley

on March 7 in Oklahoma City federal court. He is seeking actual and punitive damages on invasion of privacy and five other grounds.

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