Austin American-Statesman

Railroad Commission chief was on vacation as Harvey hit Texas

- By Paul J. Weber

Texas’ chief oil and gas regulator was on vacation in the critical days surroundin­g Hurricane Harvey as her agency grappled with fuel shortages and scrambled to respond to refinery spills caused by the storm, according to records obtained by The Associated Press.

Kimberly Corley’s work calendar listed her as on vacation for 11 days in a twoweek span before and after Harvey came ashore Aug. 25 as a Category 4 hurricane. The former Shell Oil executive was named in December 2015 as executive director of the Texas Railroad Commission, which is responsibl­e for enforcemen­t of the state’s oil and gas industry.

Corley abruptly stepped down last week. Reached by phone Wednesday, she said she had been in Big Bend in West Texas. She said she was engaged in the storm response while away, adding that Harvey wasn’t mentioned in a meeting with the agency’s chairwoman that preceded her resignatio­n.

“Harvey never came up in the conversati­on,” Corley said. “Nothing related to performanc­e came up in the meeting. I was active and available.”

She was paid $180,000 a year overseeing the small agency, which has long faced criticism for lacking transparen­cy and being too cozy with the drillers and producers it is tasked with keeping in line.

During Harvey, the commission had a presence in the state’s emergency operations center while responding to tank spills at refineries and reassuring the public there was plenty of fuel. Long gas lines were a common sight in Texas and elsewhere in the U.S. as Harvey caused energy prices to rise and drivers pumped stations dry.

According to Corley’s calendar, she had no scheduled phone calls or meetings in the two days before Harvey struck as the most powerful hurricane to hit in the U.S. since Hurricane Katrina in 2005. She had “Hurricane Harvey Update” calls listed on both the Friday the storm made landfall and Saturday, when Harvey parked over Houston and began dumping a record 50-plus inches of rain.

Corley is shown having multiple meetings Aug. 28-30 before taking vacation again Aug. 31 through the Labor Day weekend.

But it wasn’t until an unusually tense and heated public meeting of the agency’s three-member board last week that problems surroundin­g Corley became apparent. Chairwoman Christi Craddick was pointedly challenged by fellow Republican commission­er Ryan Sitton about Corley’s status.

Sitton told Craddick “this isn’t a dictatorsh­ip” as Craddick rebuffed questions about Corley. Escalating the feud further, Sitton has since asked the Texas attorney general’s office whether Craddick violated open meetings laws and exceeded her power in her handling of Corley.

Jared Craighead, Sitton’s chief of staff, defended Corley and said her physical absence did not affect the agency’s preparatio­ns or response to Harvey.

“Kim was available the entire time,” Craighead said. “It was regular interactio­n. In this 21st-century world of technology, any of us can be on emails or conference calls from pretty much anywhere.”

Craddick has said the agency needed to move in a different direction but her office has not elaborated on why Corley was let go.

 ?? RICARDO B. BRAZZIELL / AMERICAN-STATESMAN ?? The Texas Railroad Commission had a presence in the state’s emergency operations center during Hurricane Harvey last month as it dealt with tank spills at refineries and shortages of gas as drivers pumped stations dry.
RICARDO B. BRAZZIELL / AMERICAN-STATESMAN The Texas Railroad Commission had a presence in the state’s emergency operations center during Hurricane Harvey last month as it dealt with tank spills at refineries and shortages of gas as drivers pumped stations dry.

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