| Editorial
Did
Symington gain special treatment for Intervale?
By Rob Roper
Speaker
of the House Gaye Symington has made it clear that environmental legislation
and campaign finance legislation will be top priorities when the Legislature
reconvenes in January. The recent controversy surrounding Symington and
her employer, Intervale Center, relates directly to the speaker's credibility
on both of these issues.
The Rutland Herald editorial
page tried to dismiss the environmental violations at Intervale as "silly"
and a "recent dust-up," and did its best to distance Speaker Symington
from the environmental harm the center is allegedly responsible for. "Few
are going to view Symington's role as a fund-raiser for the project as
somehow laying on her shoulders the responsibility of monitoring its compost"
(editorial, Oct. 2). This casual dismissal is not justified by the facts.
First, Speaker Symington's
job at Intervale Center is not just fund raising. Her job also entails
completing annual reports and "being a public voice for the nonprofit Intervale
Center" (AP, Sept. 27). Given this official communications and PR role,
Symington should be fully aware of and up to date on all the major issues
and aspects of the organization's activities. For the "public voice" of
Intervale to pose as ignorant about a matter that threatens to terminate
the center's very existence is disingenuous at best. What's more, Intervale's
problems are not recent, as the editorial implies, but have been going
on for years.
The charges by the Agency
of Natural Resources that hit the papers last week were not the first warnings,
but rather the last straw for Intervale. A letter to Intervale from the
Department of Environmental Conservation dated Sept. 24 notes a failure
to comply with the conditions of its solid waste management certification
going back to 2002. A second letter notes that Intervale was warned in
writing by ANR of specific violations in February 2007, and Intervale was
given until July 15, 2007, to comply. Intervale didn't comply, and this
is what's so disturbing.
If Intervale had just learned
of the environmental hazards it created and promised with good faith to
fix them, pointing to the speaker's involvement would, indeed, have been
cheap political mud-slinging. But that's not what happened. The speaker
of the House is the "public voice" for an organization that has failed
to "meet the necessary standards to ensure the protection of human health
and the environment," that knew about the problems for years and then months,
and did not take action to fix the problems in a timely fashion. This is
hardly silly. That Vermonters now risk losing what is a wonderful resource
in the Intervale as a result of mismanagement and long-standing inaction
is tragic.
Perhaps more troubling than
the speaker's role as a spokesperson for Intervale is her role as a fund-raiser.
In 2006 the Burlington Electric Department decided to sell 179 acres of
land to Intervale in what many Burlington residents decried at the time
as a sweetheart, no-bid deal at significantly reduced price. The Burlington
City Council (then headed by Vermont Democratic Party Chairman Ian Carleton,
who received a $2,500 donation to the Vermont Democrats from Intervale's
honorary founding member, Will Raap, just days before the council first
took up the land deal issue) voted to approve the low sale price of the
property on Oct. 23, 2006.
But even at 50 to 80 percent
off (depending on whom you ask), Intervale would need $200,000 to cover
the cost. Where would they get it? The answer was a $220,500 grant from
the Vermont Housing and Conservation Board.
The VCHB is dependent upon
the Legislature for its budget. Back in November 2006, Vermont Business
Magazine noted that "allocations for the board were increased through the
actions of the Democratic-controlled Legislature" (Vermont Business Magazine,
Sept. 1, 2006). Who controls the Democratic-controlled Legislature? Speaker
of the House Gaye Symington.
It is a legitimate question
for Vermonters to ask (and have answered) if it is ethical or a conflict
of interest for the speaker of the House to be intimately involved in both
sides of a deal that transfers taxpayer dollars to a company that pays
Symington a salary to fund-raise.
If the Herald thinks I've
earned a "jab" for raising these issues, I'll accept that as coming with
the territory. However, Speaker has earned some hard questions about whether
the company she works for has received special treatment in any way. As
a public official, that should come with her territory.
Rob Roper is chairman
of the Vermont Republican State Committee.
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