San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Political contributi­ons cast shadow over dump vote

- By Martha Pskowski This article originally appeared on Inside Climate News, a nonprofit, independen­t news organizati­on that covers climate, energy and the environmen­t. It is republishe­d with permission. Sign up for its newsletter at insideclim­atenews.org/

A company seeking to build an oil field waste dump near wells and waterways in East Texas has showered state regulators with upward of $50,000 in political contributi­ons since 2019.

Texas Ethics Commission filings reviewed by Inside Climate News show that McBride Operating LLC contribute­d $10,000 to Railroad Commission of Texas Chair Christi Craddick on Nov. 28.

Fifteen days later, Craddick joined fellow commission­ers Jim Wright and Wayne Christian in giving the company another opportunit­y to address concerns about its controvers­ial applicatio­n to build an oil field waste site in the city of Paxton.

While commission­ers must recuse themselves from cases in which they have a “personal or private interest,” those rules do not apply to cases related to political donors. The protracted debate over the Paxton waste dump permit raises questions about whether campaign finance and ethics rules in Texas allow oil and gas companies to sway regulators, environmen­tal and corporate accountabi­lity advocates say.

Those advocates have long called for reforms to rein in the influence of oil and gas companies over the Railroad Commission.

“The railroad commission­ers are personally responsibl­e for cheapening and tarnishing their office by continuing to take significan­t amounts of money from parties who have cases on their docket,” said Andrew Wheat, research director of Texans for Public Justice and co-author of the Captive Industry report with Virginia Palacios of the nonprofit Commission Shift.

McBride and Craddick denied that campaign contributi­ons had any impact on their actions regarding McBride’s proposed waste site.

“Chairman Craddick considers fact and merit alone,” said Mia Hutchens Hale, Craddick’s director of public affairs. “Maintainin­g public trust is of utmost importance, and she operates with complete transparen­cy.”

The lawyer for owner Joseph McBride, John Hicks, defended his client’s engagement in the “constituti­onally protected democratic process.”

“Mr. McBride believes it is important that experience­d and reasonable people be elected, and then re-elected, to lead the Railroad Commission of Texas, and he will proudly continue to support candidates who he believes will do what is best for Texas,” Hicks said.

None of the sitting commission­ers will be up for re-election

until 2024.

‘Some stack of money’

Reporting from Paxton, Inside Climate News spoke with residents who have spent years fighting the McBride oil field waste dump permit. They fear the dump would contaminat­e their wells and local waterways that feed into the Sabine River. The commission’s technical permitting division has administra­tively denied the permit, but commission­ers have given

McBride several opportunit­ies to modify the applicatio­n.

“As hard as they have fought, as protracted a battle they’ve put up, there must be quite some stack of money involved,” said Eric Garrett, president of the nonprofit Paxton Water Supply Corp. and pastor of a local Pentecosta­l church.

Texas Ethics Commission campaign filings show McBride has been a frequent donor to the commission­ers charged with regulating the oil field waste industry. Craddick, Wright and Christian received a total of $53,750 in political campaign contributi­ons from McBride Operating LLC and Joseph McBride from January 2019 to December 2022.

McBride contribute­d

$12,500 during the two weeks prior to the December commission meeting at which the company’s applicatio­n was discussed — $10,000 to Craddick and $2,500 to Wright, who has active interests in 18 oil and gas waste companies.

Hicks said his client has donated to many political campaigns — from president to the Texas Supreme Court.

But Texas Ethics Commission filings show the majority of the donations go to Railroad Commission regulators.

“More than three-quarters of that money went to the three commission­ers,” said Wheat of Texans for Public Justice. “It is very concentrat­ed and focused on those individual­s who are deciding on the (Paxton permit) case.”

The commission­ers are elected statewide to six-year, staggered terms. Christian won re-election in 2022. Wright took office in 2021 and Craddick in 2012. Wright’s and Christian’s offices did not respond to questions about potential conflicts of interest.

Commission­ers can accept unlimited contributi­ons during their six-year terms, except during the six-month legislativ­e session held every two years, when statewide officehold­ers cannot accept contributi­ons. The Captive Agency report, co-authored by Wheat, recommende­d that parties with upcoming contested case hearings not be allowed to contribute to commission campaigns and that contributi­ons should be limited to $5,000 per election cycle.

A 2013 report by the Texas Sunset Advisory Commission, which evaluates state agencies, raised concerns of conflicts of interest because railroad commission­ers rely on the oil and gas industries for campaign contributi­ons.

Residents in Paxton and elsewhere who contest permit applicatio­ns face companies that often have close ties to regulators.

Community members “are going before these commission­ers who appear to have serious conflicts of interest,” Wheat said. “It doesn’t appear to be a fair fight. It’s hard to get a fair shake under these terms.”

 ?? Tim Fischer/Midland Reporter-Telegram ?? McBride Operating LLC donated $10,000 to the campaign of Railroad Commission Chair Christi Craddick 15 days before a vote related to its controvers­ial applicatio­n.
Tim Fischer/Midland Reporter-Telegram McBride Operating LLC donated $10,000 to the campaign of Railroad Commission Chair Christi Craddick 15 days before a vote related to its controvers­ial applicatio­n.
 ?? Melissa Phillip/Staff photograph­er ?? Wayne Christian is among the Texas Railroad commission­ers who have received contributi­ons from the disposal company.
Melissa Phillip/Staff photograph­er Wayne Christian is among the Texas Railroad commission­ers who have received contributi­ons from the disposal company.
 ?? Dylan Baddour/Inside Climate News ?? Cypress Creek originates on the proposed site of the oil field waste dump in Paxton.
Dylan Baddour/Inside Climate News Cypress Creek originates on the proposed site of the oil field waste dump in Paxton.

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