The Oklahoman

Pruitt partner tapped for state position

- BY BEN FELDER Staff Writer bfelder@oklahoman.com

Kenneth Wagner, a senior official at the Environmen­tal Protection Agency with close ties to former state attorney general Scott Pruitt, is Gov.-elect Kevin Stitt’s appointmen­t for secretary of energy and the environmen­t, the governor-elect’s transition office announced Wednesday. Wagner, 53, was hired by Pruitt, the former EPA administra­tor who resigned this year amid numerous ethics complaints. Before the EPA post, Wagner registered a shell company used by Pruitt

to purchase the home of an Oklahoma City lobbyist for a significan­t discount, according to an April article from The New York Times.

The same article reported that, as state attorney general, Pruitt awarded more than $600,000 in contracts to Wagner’s Tulsa-based law firm, Latham, Wagner Steele & Lehman.

Wagner’s ties to Pruitt also include serving as treasurer of Pruitt’s political action committee, part owner of the Oklahoma City RedHawks minor league baseball team, and graduating in the same 1993 class at the University of

Tulsa College of Law.

Donelle Harder, a spokeswoma­n for Stitt’s transition office, said Wagner’s connection with Pruitt was not a considerat­ion, adding that Stitt had no previous connection with the former EPA administra­tor.

“Kevin was connected to Ken Wagner because of his strong reputation as an attorney in Tulsa,” Harder said. “Never did it cross our mind his political history, because all we’ve ever heard as we began exploring people for this position was about Ken’s strong reputation, not only with environmen­tal groups, but also working with neighborin­g states (while with the EPA).”

In 2013, Gov. Mary Fallin combined the positions of secretary

of energy and secretary of environmen­t when she appointed Michael Teague, who remains in that position today.

The secretary is a member of the governor’s cabinet and oversees the state’s environmen­tal department­s, including the Water Resources Board and the Environmen­tal Quality Board. The secretary also works to develop policies that encourage safe energy exploratio­n, according to the governor’s office.

On Wednesday, energy officials celebrated the appointmen­t of Wagner, including Chad Warmington, president of Oklahoma Oil & Gas Associatio­n.

“His experience in dealing with regulation­s regarding energy

production will ensure our state continues to implement rational and reasonable policies that encourage the responsibl­e production of Oklahoma’s oil and natural gas,” Warmington said in a statement.

While at the EPA, Wagner said environmen­tal protection and economic developmen­t don’t have to be at odds.

“This idea that somehow farmers and ranchers, private land owners or those who extract minerals from the earth do not care about clean land and clean air and clean water is simply false,” Wagner said during a 2017 speech in Kentucky. “It’s a false narrative to believe you can’t be proenviron­ment and pro a growing economy and pro a healthy economy.”

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