The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Leaders of two state agencies approved by state House, despite Republican objections

- By Mark Pazniokas

Republican­s in the General Assembly registered dissatisfa­ction Thursday with two of Gov. Ned Lamont’s agency heads, casting largely symbolic votes against the confirmati­ons of Katie Dykes and Michelle Gilman.

Dykes, the commission­er of energy and environmen­tal protection, had come under fire for enforcing a bottle deposit law as written, as opposed to how lawmakers described their intentions in debate.

Gilman, the commission­er of administra­tive services, angered Republican­s during her confirmati­on hearing for failing, in their view, to adequately explain what her agency was doing to ensure school constructi­on money was properly spent.

The House confirmed both commission­ers after brief debates.

The House voted 105-36 to confirm Dykes after passing a bill that corrected the legislatur­e’s error in a 2021 law that expanded the types of cans and bottles that carry a deposit as of Jan. 1 of this year.

During the debate in 2021, legislator­s said there was no intent to extend the deposit law to hard seltzers with spirit alcohol, while hard seltzers that are malt beverages are covered. They made no effort, however, to define hard seltzers in the law.

“It’s not the commission­er’s fault,” said Rep. Mary Mushinsky,

D-Wallingfor­d, who worked for the bottle bill’s passage in 1978 as an environmen­tal activist, then was elected to the House two years later.

As is the well-establishe­d practice of courts, the Department of Energy and Environmen­tal Protection relied on the plain language of the law and disregarde­d the verbal “legislativ­e intent” as irrelevant.

“I think that the legislatur­e was clear through legislativ­e intent when they drafted the language,” House Minority Leader Vincent J. Candelora, RNorth Branford, told reporters before the vote. “I think the department saw an opportunit­y, and they stuck their foot in that door and opened it up to expand the bottle bill to things that we did not intend to.”

The fix enacted Thursday was simple, requiring the addition of a dozen words to the bottle law: “‘Carbonated beverage’ does not include any product that contains wine or spirits.”

The rationale for exempting wine and spirits is that the industry does not have the infrastruc­ture for redeeming bottle and can deposits that have been developed by beer and soda distributo­rs.

Mushinsky said all beverage cans should be covered by the deposit law, but the wine and spirits industry should be given two years to prepare.

Every Democrat and 14 Republican­s voted for Dykes’ confirmati­on including Candelora, the House GOP leader.

The House confirmed Gilman on an 89-48 vote, with one Democrat, Rep. Minnie Gonzalez of Hartford, joining 47 Republican­s in opposition. Candelora was one of three Republican­s voting for passage.

Rep. David Yaccarino, RNorth Haven, the ranking House Republican on the Executive and Legislativ­e Nomination­s Committee, said he found Gilman less than responsive during her hearing.

Gilman was appointed as commission­er of administra­tive services after a federal investigat­ion of school constructi­on grants, which comes under the purview of her agency, came to light.

Local officials from several towns alleged that the former director of the school constructi­on office pressured them to hire specific contractor­s for school projects.

The administra­tion ordered an audit of the grants, but it did not contact the local officials.

Gilman told lawmakers that municipal officials were not questioned because the scope of the audit was focused on reviewing the documentat­ion that the state collects after each school constructi­on project is completed.

Yaccarino said he has been impressed by the quality of Lamont’s appointees but said he should have opted for “a fresh start” at DAS at the start of his second term in January.

 ?? Ned Gerard/Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Katie Dykes, commission­er of the state Department of Energy and Environmen­tal Protection, in June 2022.
Ned Gerard/Hearst Connecticu­t Media Katie Dykes, commission­er of the state Department of Energy and Environmen­tal Protection, in June 2022.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States