Yuma Sun

Conservati­on group looks to sway ACC election result

- BY HOWARD FISCHER, CAPITOL MEDIA SERVICES

PHOENIX – If money is speech, the state’s largest electric utility is not going to have the only voice this year in trying to affect who gets elected to the Arizona Corporatio­n Commission.

Chispa Arizona is launching a $2.8 million television ad buy today in its bid to get support for Democrats Sandra Kennedy and Kiana Sears. And the organizati­on, an affili-

ate of the national League of Conservati­on Voters, also is planning some radio and Internet advertisin­g aimed largely at the state’s Latino community.

The move comes as Pinnacle West Capital Corp., the parent company of Arizona Public Service, already has put $3.2 million into an account specifical­ly to influence elections.

To date, that committee operating under the banner of Arizonans for Sustainabl­e Energy Policy, has not made donations to individual candidates. But it has doled out $300,000 to the Arizona Republican Party to support its slate.

That still leaves the committee with nearly $2.6 million for a last-minute ad blitz.

Matthew Benson, spokesman for the Pinnacle Westfunded group, declined to say Wednesday how that cash would be spent.

“We don’t have any campaign plans to announce at this time,’’ he said.

And APS spokesman Alan Bunnell declined to say if the company intends to spend money in other ways to influence the commission race.

“We don’t disclose our political strategies,’’ he said.

Bunnell said the company has promised to disclose all political funding in its annual report. That, however, does not come out until next spring.

But Laura Dent, executive director of the Chispa Arizona political action committee, said her organizati­on sees to need to wait and see what APS is going to do. She pointed out the utility has a record of trying to elect regulators it believes will give it favorable treatment.

Two years ago it spent $4.2 million to ensure that the commission remained an all-Republican affair. And the company will neither confirm nor deny it was the source of $3.2 million spent by two groupos that do not disclose donors to elect Republican­s in 2014.

“For too long the Corporatio­n Commission has been under the influence of the largest private utility in the state that it’s supposed to regulate,’’ she said. “I think it’s a moral hazard that the state’s largest utility, which is a private monopoly with 1.2 million captive audience members as customers is the dominant voice in the election of its own regulators.’’

A key purpose behind the commercial is to help break the strangleho­ld the GOP has had on the five-member commission since the 2012 election. It has been the outside spending that has helped keep that unilateral control in place.

Dent wants voters to oust incumbent Justin Olson who was appointed to the panel last year by Gov. Doug Ducey, and defeat attorney Rodney Glassman, the other GOP contender for the two four-year terms up for grabs this year.

Dent said that Chispa, which focuses on environmen­tal issues particular­ly from the viewpoint of the Latino community, believes that Sears and Kennedy will be better choices.

“Latinos are disproport­ionately affected by climate change,’’ she said, with Latinos paying a larger percentage of their income in energy costs. Then there’s the number of Latinos who work outside in agricultur­al and constructi­on jobs and are exposed to higher temperatur­es.

“And Latinos are more likely to live in areas with high pollution and they have higher rates of asthma,’’ she said.

But Dent said the TV commercial­s, coupled with the online and radio campaign, has another purpose: informing voters of exactly what the ACC is and does.

“There’s still a lot of Arizona residents out there that don’t know what this corporatio­n (commission) does, and doing that in a really accessible way,’’ she said.

Dent said LCV is the largest’ contributo­r, though she would not disclose what percentage of the money it is providing.

Alyssa Roberts, a spokeswoma­n for that organizati­on, said the cash is part of

more than $60 million the LCV Victory Fund and its state partners are spending this year, including $25 million to affect state races.

Asked about the source of the dollars, Roberts cited reports filed with the Federal Elections Commission.

The most recent filing shows billionair­e Mayor Michael Bloomberg, the former Republican mayor of New York City, as the largest contributo­r at $2 million. Bloomberg recently reregister­ed as a Democrat, leading to speculatio­n he is looking at a 2020 presidenti­al bid.

Earlier this month Bloomberg pledged $1 million to back an initiative in the state of Washington to charge large polluters an escalating fee on fossil fuel emissions.

The funding to help Sears and Kennedy is on top of $250,000 that California billionair­e Tom Steyer is spending on their behalf. He is the source of virtually all of the funds being spent to promote Propositio­n 127 which would mandate half of electricit­y in Arizona come from renewable sources by 2030, a measure opposed by APS.

But Dent said that neither Steyer nor any of his political committees are funding this $2.8 million campaign, directly or indirectly.

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