Entries in Daniel Perez (5)

Sunday
Aug132017

Matteson & Trish try to cover up Dem solar scam

For years, Democrats have accused Republicans of being anti-solar.  It is no secret that many on the Left equate having concerns about the efficiency of solar energy as being anti-environment.

 

With the election of Barack Obama in 2008, liberal environmentalists -- both in Washington, DC, and across the country -- began pushing local solar projects promising economic benefits, savings, and federal money.  In every case, these projects "primed the pump" with the promise of federal funds.

 

The news media was uniformly supportive of this "great leap" towards "alternative energy" and sermonized about it non-stop.  Environmentalist were ecstatic. 

 

And so the Solyndra scandal and dozens like it were born.  As Wikipedia noted:

 

"Solyndra designed, manufactured, and sold solar photovoltaic (PV) systems composed of panels and mounting hardware for large, low-slope commercial rooftops. The panels perform optimally when mounted horizontally and packed closely together, the company claimed, covering significantly more of the typically available roof area and producing more electricity per rooftop on an annual basis than a conventional panel installation."

 

"Although the company was once touted for its unusual technology, plummeting silicon prices led to the company's being unable to compete with conventional solar panels made of crystalline silicon. The company filed for bankruptcy on September 1, 2011."

 

Solyndra cost federal taxpayers $535 million and state taxpayers $25.1 million.  Government attempts to recoup money through bankruptcy restructuring and Justice Department lawsuits have produced less than hoped for.

 

So a Democrat Party attorney named Stephen Pearlman comes up with a plan to sell this solar nonsense to Republican-controlled counties.  The media applauds the effort.   Pearlman started out working with the Essex County Democrat machine as their bond counsel and later got involved with the Camden Democrat machine  when Jim Florio was Governor.   He is a well-known proponent of solar energy.  Pearlman's law partner was active in the liberal NJ Women's Political Caucus.  They listed their legal "practice areas" as "social investment law" and "renewable energy law."

 

The media applauded these "solar initiatives" and shamed those who questioned them.  Republicans who questioned the "alternative energy" bandwagon, were accused of being backward and  "climate-change-deniers."

 

But it wasn't a surprise to conservatives when the Sussex solar project went bust.

 

And it isn't a surprise that now -- after solar has become the latest, coolest, hippest "new idea" to go into the crapper -- all of those liberal solar activists and their media enablers are claiming to know nothing about it and trying to blame Republicans.  That's not to say that Republicans don't share in the blame.  They do.  They believed the media hype about solar and other such "alternative energy" programs.  They believed the Obama administration's forecasts and got sucked-in by promises of federal "free" money.  They believed the Democrat attorneys who sold them the solar project. 

 

And worst of all -- they believed the State Comptroller's Office (who was appointed by Democrat Governor Jon Corzine) when it signed-off on the Sussex solar project, claiming that it was fit for purpose.  It was not.

 

So why are Democrat candidates Kate Matteson and Gina Trish trying to cover-up the State Comptroller's role in this fiasco?  Is it because their running mate, Democrat Freeholder candidate Dan Perez, is the person responsible for getting the State Comptroller -- now in private practice as an attorney -- a $500,000 taxpayer-funded contact to review the solar project that his office signed-off on in 2011?

 

Below is a memo from attorney Dan Perez (now a Democrat candidate for Sussex County Freeholder) to then Freeholder Gail Phoebus:

 

Begin forwarded message:

From: dan@danperezlaw.com
Date: April 12, 2015 at 7:47:23 AM EDT
To: Gail Phoebus <gphoeb@gmail.com>
Subject: Agenda

You pick the time and let me know; I am clear all day. How about this for a discussion list (please feel free to change):

1. Catch-up on recent freeholder meeting and other developments

2. Archer & Greiner conflict/possible ethics complaints against Cantalupo (undisclosed representation of Birdsall) and Weinstein (led settlement negotiations without being appointed)

3. OPRA requests and responses, post to a website?

4. McConnell malpractice issues/possible local gov't ethics complaint

5. New law firm to review settlement -- Lowenstein (Boxer), NYC??

6. Wendy Molnar

7. Dan to meet with Phil?

8. Budget/scope/time

9. Response to Crabb column

10. Next steps

 

---
 Daniel M. Perez, Esq. Law Offices of

            Daniel M. Perez 93 Spring Street, Suite 505 Newton, NJ

            07860 (973) 300-5135 (office) (973) 300-5199 (fax) (201)

            303-6209 (cell)

 

In February 2011, the Board of Chosen Freeholders of Sussex County authorized a shared services agreement with the Morris County Improvement Authority (MCIA) to implement the solar project.  In July 2011, the project was sent to the Office of the State Comptroller for review.  At the time, Matthew Boxer was the State Comptroller and responsible for that office.  After reviewing all the project documents, the following month (August 2011), the project was given the okay by the Office of the State Comptroller.  Based on this review, the Sussex County Freeholders went forward with the project. 

 

Later, in January 2016, Matthew Boxer would be given a no-bid contract to review the solar project that his office had signed-off on in August 2011.  How that contract came to be awarded to Mr. Boxer remains a mystery, although two officials were clearly involved -- Freeholder Boss George Graham and SCMUA Commissioner Dan Perez (a New York City lawyer, appointed by Graham, who is now himself a candidate for Freeholder).

 

. . .And yet, in Matthew Boxer's 62-page report  -- costing Sussex County taxpayers $500,000 ($8,064 per page) -- he never once mentions the role of the Office of the State Comptroller.  The word "comptroller" doesn't appear in his report, even once, despite the central role it played in the scam and in spite of the fact that Matthew Boxer ran the office when it was responsible for reviewing the solar contract.

 

In his own report, Mr. Boxer lays bare his office's misfeasance:

 

"The ability of the County to intercede or assist in the dispute between Sunlight and PPM was further hindered by the County’s lack of legal standing in the operative contract documents.  For example, the County had no contract with

Sunlight, only the MCIA did.  The County was even further removed contractually from PPM; neither the County nor the MCIA had a contract with PPM, only Sunlight did... In short, the County was underwriting the Solar Project, but was not in a position to affect it or protect it.

 

Typically, when a contractor on a public construction project is unable or unwilling, for financial reasons or otherwise, to complete the project, the public entity may resort to the performance bond that has been posted by the contractor.  A performance bond is a commitment made by an insurance company or bank, known as a 'surety,' to compensate the contracting entity financially or otherwise carry out the completion of the project in cases where the contractor defaults on its obligations...   In the case of the Solar Project, a surety bond was posted that contained a commitment from a well-known, national insurance company.  While the bond technically complied with legal requirements, the terms of the specific bond that was posted made the County’s invocation of the bond difficult, if not impossible.  First, despite the massive financial commitment the County had made on this project, the County was not listed as a beneficiary (known as the 'obligee') on the bond.  Instead, the MCIA and a Sunlight-related entity were listed as the obligees.  Thus, the County had no explicit standing to invoke the bond or to seek compensation under the bond.  It was reliant in this regard on the MCIA." 

 

In August 2011, Matthew Boxer's office (the Office of the State Comptroller) approved the terms of the 196-page contract. The following link provides the table of contents of the contract forwarded to and approved by the Office of the State Comptroller:

 

http://www.sussexcountywatchdog.com/blog/2017/8/10/boxer-report-a-cover-up-of-his-offices-role-in-solar-scam.html

 

In light of his office's blatant failures, Matthew Boxer should be asked the following question:  Do you believe that the Office of the State Comptroller let down the taxpayers of Sussex County?

 

In April 2015, the Office of the State Comptroller turned down Sussex County's request to review the solar project.  No official reason was ever provided.  However, there is an "unofficial" explanation provided in a May 26, 2015, memo from the MCIA.  It goes as follows:

 

"The County is still awaiting a written letter from the Office of the State Comptroller, as a follow up to the phone conference... on April 27, 2015.  In the absence of the written response, and as a reminder, the State representatives (OSC) advised the County that it undertook an internal review of the Solar II Program and conducted its own analysis and evaluation of the Solar II Program.  Following this review process, the Comptroller's Office concluded that, based upon the information... forwarded to them, it was not going to pursue a further review of the Solar II Program."

 

It seems the Office of the State Comptroller had conducted a review of the solar project it had signed-off on, but was unwilling to share said review.  The memo continued:

 

"The Comptroller's Office noted several factors in its post-review decision not to review the matter further:

 

a. Noting that the Solar Programs and original agreements were a local policy decision, approved by the County Freeholders, and;

 

b. That in the view of the Comptroller's Office, both the change in the SREC Market, as well as the legal dispute between the developer and the contractor (SunLight/MasTec) contributed to the Solar II Program not proceeding as originally expected."

 

A "post-review decision not to review the matter..."  WTF??? 

 

The Office of the State Comptroller's refusal to share the review that they had already conducted or to take that review further was a loss to the taxpayers of Sussex County, but a boon to former State Comptroller Matthew Boxer, who was now being touted as the only man to do a review that was to be paid for by fresh taxpayer's money.

 

And so, it came to pass that in January 2016 a new Freeholder Board in Sussex County -- now controlled by the very same individuals who had been for months advocating for the selection of Matthew Boxer as the only man to review the solar project -- handed Matthew Boxer a contract for $500,000 to conduct said review.

 

The manner in which this contract was provided to Mr. Boxer was unusual, and remains unexplained to this day.  In a letter, dated January 19, 2016, a Sussex County Freeholder wrote to Mr. Boxer's firm inquiring how Boxer obtained the contract.  Here is what he wrote:

 

"Dear Mr. Boxer,

 

On New Years’ Eve, Dec 31, 2015, I received a phone call, about 5:00 PM, informing me that a resolution had been submitted to the Sussex County Clerk of the Board regarding an agreement with Lowenstein Sandler, LLC to provide professional services to conduct a review of the facts and circumstances involved in the Sussex County Renewable Energy Program.

 

This was the first time I had any knowledge of this negotiation and agreement.

 

I spoke to our Freeholder Director, the other sitting Freeholders, our County Administrator, our County Council, our Clerk of the Board, our County Treasurer, our Director of the Department of Central and Shared Services, our Purchasing Agent, and our assistant purchasing agent.

 

None of these individuals, except Freeholder George Graham, admitted to having any knowledge of these negotiations, conversations, meetings or agreements with your law firm before 5:00 PM on New Years’ Eve 2015.

 

...I believe that the governing body has had no part in negotiating an agreement with your firm.

 

I would like to know, and now ask, who represented Sussex County in these negotiations, especially the negotiation of the 'blended' hourly rate and the understanding that the Board of Chosen Freeholders has provided that fees are not to exceed $500,000.00? "

 

To this day, this Freeholder -- a respected member of the community in Sussex County and a veteran of the Korean War -- has never received the courtesy of a reply.  Why not?  And note that, at the time, this Freeholder -- as a member of the Board -- was Mr. Boxer's client.

 

The Freeholder wrote to the State Ethics Commission about the matter and noted the following:

 

"At the January 27th, 2016 regular Freeholder meeting, now, Freeholder Director George Graham admitted that he, solely, negotiated this agreement.

 

He stated that this agreement was negotiated with two phone calls with a Matthew Boxer, Esq.

 

In 2011 Matthew Boxer was the New Jersey State Comptroller.

 

Matthew Boxer led a staff responsible for overseeing audits and performance reviews at all levels of New Jersey government. The office audited government finances, examined the efficiency of government programs and scrutinized government contracts.

 

On August 23, 2011 the State Comptroller's office, after a review, signed off on the procurement of a Photovoltaic Systems Developer with respect to certain local government facilities in the County of Sussex and the RFP as approved for advertisement. 

 

I have been asked by many Sussex County residents if Matthew Boxer has a conflict of interest representing Sussex County as Special Counsel in order to review its participation in the Sussex County Renewable Energy Program."

 

To which the State Ethics Commission replied:

 

"Mr. Boxer contacted this office to seek advice regarding whether the post-employment restrictions prohibit him from being involved in a review of the (solar) Program.  Mr. Boxer advised that he did not have any personal involvement in the Office of the State Comptroller's review or approval of Sussex County's procurement related to the Program.  Mr. Boxer also advised that he contacted the Office of the State Comptroller, which performed a search of its records and emails and found no emails, correspondence or other documents indicating that he had any involvement in that office's review of the procurement for the Program.  Based on these facts, the State Ethics Commission concluded that Mr. Boxer was not substantially or directly involved in the Program during his State employment and that the post-employment restrictions therefore do not prohibit him (or derivatively Lowenstein Sandler) from being involved in the present review of the Program on behalf of Sussex County."

 

Note that the word "facts" is used when "representations" is more appropriate.  As the State Ethics Commission did not conduct its own review of the Office of the State Comptroller's "records and emails... correspondence... other documents", it is clear that they are simply accepting Mr. Boxer at his word.

 

It is unusual to claim that the person in charge of an office was so lax as to have no knowledge of what was a three-county project involving -- to start -- $100 million.  And that his office reviewed nearly a dozen similar contracts involving many more millions in public money.  Is Mr. Boxer claiming that he was such a poor and disconnected "delegator" that he lacked direct, day-to-day knowledge of the office he was responsible for?  And how did he come to be recommended as the sole recipient of a $500,000 contract to review what his office failed in reviewing at the start? 

 

We are left with a situation in which the taxpayers of Sussex County must be content to take the word of Mr. Boxer.  Especially as he appears to be the only person to have benefitted from this fiasco -- to the tune of a half-million dollars!

 

It is time for the Freeholders to establish a citizen's commission to investigate this corrupt mess and call those who have benefited to account.  Make someone like Harvey Roseff the chairman and you won't need to spend a half million dollars of taxpayers' money (property tax money!) to get the job done.


Sunday
Aug132017

Herald leaves out "smoking gun" from its solar timeline

The New Jersey Herald's coverage of the Boxer report on the solar project has some people wondering why the newspaper is going to such lengths to cover-up the role played by former State Comptroller Matthew Boxer himself -- the fact that his office reviewed and approved the controversial solar project in August 2011.  On Sunday, the Herald ran a story that provided the following timeline for July and August of 2011:

July 27, 2011 -- The freeholder board introduced an ordinance guaranteeing the bonds to be issued to fund the project. According to freeholder meeting minutes, Eskilson "mentioned there are lots of safeguards built into this project" and referenced "minimum risk going forward." Zeoli, at the same meeting, stated he was "convinced that the risk to the County is minimal."

Aug. 17, 2011 -- The freeholder board unanimously approved the bond ordinance.

(NJ Herald, August 13, 2017)

In fact, the official timeline provided by government investigators is different:

July - Project RFP is submitted for review of Office of Comptroller.

July - Sussex County first reading of Guaranty Ordinance, Consent to MCIA Bonds & MCIA RFP for Project Developers.

August - MCIA Bond Issue and County Guaranty positive findings received from Local Finance Board.

August - Sussex County second reading of Guaranty Ordinance not to exceed $50,000,000.

August - State Comptroller provides signoff on RFP for Project documents.

(Investigation Update, July 27, 2016)

Why has the State Comptroller's role been scrubbed from the Herald's account?

In February 2011, the Board of Chosen Freeholders of Sussex County authorized a shared services agreement with the Morris County Improvement Authority (MCIA) to implement the solar project.  In July 2011, the project was sent to the Office of the State Comptroller for review.  At the time, Matthew Boxer was the State Comptroller and responsible for that office.  After reviewing all the project documents, the following month (August 2011), the project was given the okay by the Office of the State Comptroller.  Based on this review, the Sussex County Freeholders went forward with the project. 

Later, in January 2016, Matthew Boxer would be given a no-bid contract to review the solar project that his office had signed-off on in August 2011.  How that contract came to be awarded to Mr. Boxer remains a mystery, although two officials were clearly involved -- Freeholder Boss George Graham and SCMUA Commissioner Dan Perez (a New York City lawyer, appointed by Graham, who is now himself a candidate for Freeholder).

. . .And yet, in Matthew Boxer's 62-page report  -- costing Sussex County taxpayers $500,000 ($8,064 per page) -- he never once mentions the role of the Office of the State Comptroller.  The word "comptroller" doesn't appear in his report, even once, despite the central role it played in the scam and in spite of the fact that Matthew Boxer ran the office when it was responsible for reviewing the solar contract.

In his own report, Mr. Boxer lays bare his office's misfeasance:

"The ability of the County to intercede or assist in the dispute between Sunlight and PPM was further hindered by the County’s lack of legal standing in the operative contract documents.  For example, the County had no contract with

Sunlight, only the MCIA did.  The County was even further removed contractually from PPM; neither the County nor the MCIA had a contract with PPM, only Sunlight did... In short, the County was underwriting the Solar Project, but was not in a position to affect it or protect it.

Typically, when a contractor on a public construction project is unable or unwilling, for financial reasons or otherwise, to complete the project, the public entity may resort to the performance bond that has been posted by the contractor.  A performance bond is a commitment made by an insurance company or bank, known as a 'surety,' to compensate the contracting entity financially or otherwise carry out the completion of the project in cases where the contractor defaults on its obligations...   In the case of the Solar Project, a surety bond was posted that contained a commitment from a well-known, national insurance company.  While the bond technically complied with legal requirements, the terms of the specific bond that was posted made the County’s invocation of the bond difficult, if not impossible.  First, despite the massive financial commitment the County had made on this project, the County was not listed as a beneficiary (known as the 'obligee') on the bond.  Instead, the MCIA and a Sunlight-related entity were listed as the obligees.  Thus, the County had no explicit standing to invoke the bond or to seek compensation under the bond.  It was reliant in this regard on the MCIA." 

In August 2011, Matthew Boxer's office (the Office of the State Comptroller) approved the terms of the 196-page contract. Below is a the table of contents of the contract forwarded to and approved by the Office of the State Comptroller:

THE MORRIS COUNTY IMPROVEMENT AUTHORITY

MORRIS COUNTY RENEWABLE ENERGY PROGRAM

(COUNTY OF SUSSEX PROGRAM), SERIES 2011

__________________

REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS

For a Developer of Photovoltaic Systems with respect to certain Local Government Facilities in the County of Sussex, New Jersey

Dated [Post Date]

TABLE OF CONTENTS

EXHIBITS

Exhibit 1          Notice of RFP  ...................................................................................... E1-1

Exhibit 2          Respondent Checklist .......................................................................... E2-1

Exhibit 3          Proposed Schedule for Series 2011 Program ..................................... E3-1

ARTICLE I

INTRODUCTION, OVERVIEW, FINANCING OPTIONS

AND DEFINITIONS

Section 1.1      Introduction and Overview ...................................................................... 1

Section 1.2      Financing Options ..................................................................................... 9

Section 1.3      Authority Financing Option ...................................................................... 9

Section 1.4      Company Services Under the Authority Financing Option .................... 21

Section 1.5      Company Financing Option .................................................................... 21

Section 1.6      Company Services Under the Company Financing Option..................... 23

Section 1.7      Material Changes to RFP......................................................................... 24

Section 1.8      Definitions .............................................................................................. 24

 ARTICLE II

INITIAL ACTION BY RESPONDENTS

Section 2.1      RFP .......................................................................................................... 28

Section 2.2      Authority Contact Persons ..................................................................... 28

Section 2.3      Respondent Registration ........................................................................ 29

 ARTICLE III

PROPOSED SCHEDULE

Section 3.1      RFP and Notice of RFP ............................................................................ 30

Section 3.2      Pre-Proposal Submission Meeting.......................................................... 30

Section 3.3      Site Tours of Local Unit Facilities ........................................................... 30

Section 3.4      Proposed Schedule for Series 2011 Program ........................................ 32

ARTICLE IV

CERTAIN INFORMATION TO BE INCLUDED IN PROPOSALS

Section 4.1      Pricing and Other Terms of Forms A-1-a and A-1-b ............................... 34

Section 4.2      Renewable Energy Projects .................................................................... 45

Section 4.3      Reserved ................................................................................................. 45

ARTICLE V

PROCEDURES FOR SUBMISSION OF PROPOSALS

Section 5.1      Substantive Requirements for Proposals ............................................... 46

Section 5.2      Permitted Inclusions in Proposals .......................................................... 48

Section 5.3      Proposals Governed by Applicable Law ................................................. 49

Section 5.4      Procedural Requirements and Other Matters for Proposals ................. 50

Section 5.5      Clarification of Proposals ....................................................................... 54

Section 5.6      No Tax Advice Offered ........................................................................... 55

ARTICLE VI

AWARD TO SUCCESSFUL RESPONDENT

Section 6.1      Submitted Proposals .............................................................................. 56

Section 6.2      Evaluation Criteria .................................................................................. 56

Section 6.3      Basis of Award ........................................................................................ 58

Section 6.4      Rejection of Proposals............................................................................ 59

Section 6.5      Conditional Award.................................................................................. 59

ARTICLE VII

CERTAIN GENERAL MATTERS

Section 7.1      Exhibit 2  Checklist ................................................................................. 60

Section 7.2      Proposal and Construction Bonding ...................................................... 61

Section 7.3      Insurance ................................................................................................ 65

Section 7.4      Indemnification ...................................................................................... 66

Section 7.5      Labor....................................................................................................... 66

Section 7.6      Licenses and Laws................................................................................... 71

Section 7.7      Background Check…………………………………………………………….....72

APPENDICES

Appendix A     Attach Forms of Program Documents and RFP Authorizing Resolution. A-1

       Company Documents:

Appendix A-1              PPA............................................................................. A-1-1

Appendix A-2              Company Lease Agreement....................................... A-2-1

Appendix A-3              Company Continuing Disclosure Agreement............. A-3-1

Appendix A-4              Company Pledge Agreement..................................... A-4-1

Appendix A-5              Form of Master Local Unit License Agreement.......... A-5-1

      Other Program Documents:

Appendix A-6              Authority Bond Resolution......................................... A-6-1

Appendix A-7              County Guaranty Agreement..................................... A-7-1

      Authority RFP Authorizing Resolution:

Appendix A-8              Authority Resolution adopted July 20, 2011

            ........... Authorizing Issuance of RFP....................................... A-8-1

Appendix B     Description of Projects.......................................................................... B-1

Appendix B-1             Renewable Energy Projects........................................ B-1-1

                                 Conceptual Site Plans

                                 Site Roof Warranty Information

Appendix B-2              Reserved (No Capital Improvement Projects)............ B-2-1

Appendix B-3              Estimated Load Data by Local Unit Facility................ B-3-1

Appendix C     Scope of Work and Technical Specifications ........................................ C-1

Appendix D     Forms to be Included in Exhibit A of Proposals..................................... D-1

Appendix D-A-1-a[i]      Proposal Form A-1-a; Authority Financing

                                    PPA Price Quotation Sheet.................................. D-A-1-A-1

Appendix D-A-1-b[ii]     Proposal Form A-1-b; Company Financing

                                    PPA Price Quotation Sheet …………………………….D-A-2-B-1

Appendix D-A-2            Proposal Form A-2; Respondent Information /

                                   Cover Letter Form…………………………………………D-A-2-1

Appendix D-A-3            Proposal Form A-3; Consent of Surety and Surety Form D-A-3-1

Appendix D-A-4[iii]        Proposal Form A-4; Agreement for Proposal Security

                                    In Lieu of Proposal Bond......................................... D-A-4-1

Appendix D-A-5[iv]        Proposal Form A-5; Proposal Bond........................ D-A-5-1

Appendix D-A-6          Proposal Form A-6; Ownership Disclosure Statement D-A-6-2

Appendix D-A-7          Proposal Form A-7; Non-Collusion Affidavit........... D-A-7-1

Appendix D-A-8          Proposal Form A-8; Consent to Investigation......... D-A-8-1

Appendix D-A-9          Proposal Form A-9; Statement of Respondent’s

                                 Qualifications.......................................................... D-A-9-1

Appendix D-A-10        Proposal Form A-10; Acknowledgement of

                                 Receipt of Addenda (if any).................................. D-A-10-1

Appendix D-A-11        Proposal Form A-11; Sealed Proposal Checklist

                                 (See Exhibit 2)....................................................... D-A-11-1

Appendix D-A-12[v]       Proposal Form A-12; Authorization for Background

                                      Check.................................................................... D-A-12-1

Appendix E     Estimated Basic Lease Payment Schedule (including sources and uses) E-1

                              Estimated Basic Lease Payment Schedule allocable to Series 2011A Bonds

                              Estimated Basic Lease Payment Schedule allocable to Series 2011B Note

                              Aggregate Basic Lease Payment Schedule, allocable to Series 2011 Bonds

                              Estimated Sources and Uses, Series 2011A Bonds

                              Estimated Sources and Uses, Series 2011B Note

                              Aggregate Sources and Uses, Series 2011 Bonds

Appendix F     County Deficiency Option...................................................................... F-1

                             Option F-1

                             Option F-2

In light of his office's blatant failures, Matthew Boxer should be asked the following question:  Do you believe that the Office of the State Comptroller let down the taxpayers of Sussex County?

In April 2015, the Office of the State Comptroller turned down Sussex County's request to review the solar project.  No official reason was ever provided.  However, there is an "unofficial" explanation provided in a May 26, 2015, memo from the MCIA.  It goes as follows:

"The County is still awaiting a written letter from the Office of the State Comptroller, as a follow up to the phone conference... on April 27, 2015.  In the absence of the written response, and as a reminder, the State representatives (OSC) advised the County that it undertook an internal review of the Solar II Program and conducted its own analysis and evaluation of the Solar II Program.  Following this review process, the Comptroller's Office concluded that, based upon the information... forwarded to them, it was not going to pursue a further review of the Solar II Program."

It seems the Office of the State Comptroller had conducted a review of the solar project it had signed-off on, but was unwilling to share said review.  The memo continued:

"The Comptroller's Office noted several factors in its post-review decision not to review the matter further:

a. Noting that the Solar Programs and original agreements were a local policy decision, approved by the County Freeholders, and;

b. That in the view of the Comptroller's Office, both the change in the SREC Market, as well as the legal dispute between the developer and the contractor (SunLight/MasTec) contributed to the Solar II Program not proceeding as originally expected."

A "post-review decision not to review the matter..."  WTF??? 

The Office of the State Comptroller's refusal to share the review that they had already conducted or to take that review further was a loss to the taxpayers of Sussex County, but a boon to former State Comptroller Matthew Boxer, who was now being touted as the only man to do a review that was to be paid for by fresh taxpayer's money.

And so, it came to pass that in January 2016 a new Freeholder Board in Sussex County -- now controlled by the very same individuals who had been for months advocating for the selection of Matthew Boxer as the only man to review the solar project -- handed Matthew Boxer a contract for $500,000 to conduct said review.

The manner in which this contract was provided to Mr. Boxer was unusual, and remains unexplained to this day.  In a letter, dated January 19, 2016, a Sussex County Freeholder wrote to Mr. Boxer's firm inquiring how Boxer obtained the contract.  Here is what he wrote:

"Dear Mr. Boxer,

On New Years’ Eve, Dec 31, 2015, I received a phone call, about 5:00 PM, informing me that a resolution had been submitted to the Sussex County Clerk of the Board regarding an agreement with Lowenstein Sandler, LLC to provide professional services to conduct a review of the facts and circumstances involved in the Sussex County Renewable Energy Program.

This was the first time I had any knowledge of this negotiation and agreement.

I spoke to our Freeholder Director, the other sitting Freeholders, our County Administrator, our County Council, our Clerk of the Board, our County Treasurer, our Director of the Department of Central and Shared Services, our Purchasing Agent, and our assistant purchasing agent.

None of these individuals, except Freeholder George Graham, admitted to having any knowledge of these negotiations, conversations, meetings or agreements with your law firm before 5:00 PM on New Years’ Eve 2015.

...I believe that the governing body has had no part in negotiating an agreement with your firm.

I would like to know, and now ask, who represented Sussex County in these negotiations, especially the negotiation of the 'blended' hourly rate and the understanding that the Board of Chosen Freeholders has provided that fees are not to exceed $500,000.00? "

To this day, this Freeholder -- a respected member of the community in Sussex County and a veteran of the Korean War -- has never received the courtesy of a reply.  Why not?  And note that, at the time, this Freeholder -- as a member of the Board -- was Mr. Boxer's client.

The Freeholder wrote to the State Ethics Commission about the matter and noted the following:

"At the January 27th, 2016 regular Freeholder meeting, now, Freeholder Director George Graham admitted that he, solely, negotiated this agreement.

He stated that this agreement was negotiated with two phone calls with a Matthew Boxer, Esq.

In 2011 Matthew Boxer was the New Jersey State Comptroller.

Matthew Boxer led a staff responsible for overseeing audits and performance reviews at all levels of New Jersey government. The office audited government finances, examined the efficiency of government programs and scrutinized government contracts.

On August 23, 2011 the State Comptroller's office, after a review, signed off on the procurement of a Photovoltaic Systems Developer with respect to certain local government facilities in the County of Sussex and the RFP as approved for advertisement.

I have been asked by many Sussex County residents if Matthew Boxer has a conflict of interest representing Sussex County as Special Counsel in order to review its participation in the Sussex County Renewable Energy Program."

To which the State Ethics Commission replied:

"Mr. Boxer contacted this office to seek advice regarding whether the post-employment restrictions prohibit him from being involved in a review of the (solar) Program.  Mr. Boxer advised that he did not have any personal involvement in the Office of the State Comptroller's review or approval of Sussex County's procurement related to the Program.  Mr. Boxer also advised that he contacted the Office of the State Comptroller, which performed a search of its records and emails and found no emails, correspondence or other documents indicating that he had any involvement in that office's review of the procurement for the Program.  Based on these facts, the State Ethics Commission concluded that Mr. Boxer was not substantially or directly involved in the Program during his State employment and that the post-employment restrictions therefore do not prohibit him (or derivatively Lowenstein Sandler) from being involved in the present review of the Program on behalf of Sussex County."

Note that the word "facts" is used when "representations" is more appropriate.  As the State Ethics Commission did not conduct its own review of the Office of the State Comptroller's "records and emails... correspondence... other documents", it is clear that they are simply accepting Mr. Boxer at his word.

It is unusual to claim that the person in charge of an office was so lax as to have no knowledge of what was a three-county project involving -- to start -- $100 million.  And that his office reviewed nearly a dozen similar contracts involving many more millions in public money.  Is Mr. Boxer claiming that he was such a poor and disconnected "delegator" that he lacked direct, day-to-day knowledge of the office he was responsible for?  And how did he come to be recommended as the sole recipient of a $500,000 contract to review what his office failed in reviewing at the start? 

We are left with a situation in which the taxpayers of Sussex County must be content to take the word of Mr. Boxer.  Especially as he appears to be the only person to have benefitted from this fiasco -- to the tune of a half-million dollars!

It is time for the Freeholders to establish a citizen's commission to investigate this corrupt mess and call those who have benefited to account.  Make someone like Harvey Roseff the chairman and you won't need to spend a half million dollars of taxpayers' money (property tax money!) to get the job done.


[i] Required if Proposal utilizes Authority Financing Option.

[ii] Required if Proposal utilizes Company Financing Option.

[iii] Provide EITHER (i) Form A-4 (Proposal Funds) or (ii) Form A-5 (Proposal Bond); found in Appendices D-A-4 or D-A-5, as applicable.   See Section 7.2(a) of RFP.

[iv] See prior footnote.

[v] Provided by Successful Bidder only.  To be supplied upon award of Successful Bidder.

Tuesday
Apr042017

Tea Party boss promotes liberal Democrat candidate

Next year, the leadership of the Skylands Tea Party group will travel down to Washington, DC, to attend CPAC -- the Conservative Political Action Committee conference -- where they will listen to an address by Senator Elizabeth Warren.  Only they won't.  Because unlike the Skylands Tea Party, CPAC is a conservative organization and conservative groups worthy of the name do not promote liberal Democrats.

We thought of this and had a good laugh when a missive was posted by Skylands Tea Party President Douglas Amedeo.  Of course, it was immediately "liked" by New Jersey Department of Transportation employee Bill Hayden (Skylands' Vice President and a candidate for State Senate).  We wonder what public employee Hayden does all day for his taxpayer-funded salary, pension, and generous benefits -- does he follow Facebook or work?

Amedeo's missive claimed that it was "conservative" to invite lawyer Jennifer Hamilton, a liberal Democrat running for State Senate against Republican Steve Oroho, to speak before the Skylands Tea Party group.  This was a follow up to the day before, when Amedeo sent out an enormous advertisement for Democrat Hamilton, urging Skylands' members and the public to come hear her speak.

Hamilton, who describes herself as a "progressive Democrat" was praised by the Tea Party's Amedeo as a "fiscal conservative" and as someone who is "more conservative" than Republican Steve Oroho.  Really, no kidding, the idiot actually said that.

Amedeo assures us that it is no big deal that Hamilton is pro-abortion, anti-gun, and pro-transgendered agenda.  Hamilton would spend millions funding Planned Parenthood and vote for the imposition of draconian gun confiscation laws, but these things shouldn't matter in defining this liberal Democrat as a "conservative" (the same view held by the libertarian group AFP, by the way).

Where have we heard this before?  Oh yes, last year's race for Congress between Republican Scott Garret and Democrat Josh Gottheimer. 

Don't worry, they said, Gottheimer is really a conservative Democrat (even while he called himself a "progressive").  So fools like Doug Amedeo helped screw Republican Scott Garrett (with a 99% American Conservative Union voting record) and replaced him with Democrat Josh Gottheimer (on target to get an 8% ACU record). 

Amedeo and the Tea Party want to follow up last year's brilliant exercise by replacing Republican Steve Oroho (with a 93% American Conservative Union voting record) with Jennifer Hamilton who might manage a 5% if she works real hard at it.  This is "progress" in the eyes of the Tea Party leadership.

"Progressive" is the word liberals use when they don't want to be called "liberals," but let's look at what the Democrats themselves had to say about their legislative team:

Trish and Matteson complete a Democratic ticket that includes Jennifer Hamilton as a hopeful to replace Steve Oroho as state senator.

Sussex County Democrats, long thought a largely invisible minority, are seeing a resurgence of energy and commitment in the wake of the disastrous Christie administration, the more disastrous presidential election and a realization that its entrenched GOP representation has steadily supported pro-corporate agendas—as well as those antagonist to women’s rights, education, environmental protections and other progressive no-brainers—to the detriment of the population.

“It's clear that our current local leadership is just right in alignment with this right-wing, pro-corporate agenda,” Trish said Thursday evening at the Irish Cottage Inn in Franklin. “All the local leadership is voting just like Scott Garrett did.

“There's one more thing they have in common with Scott Garrett,” she continued, “and that is that their time in our district is limited.”

(Sussex County Democrat Committee, March 31, 2017)

*    *  

We all get that law firms play both sides of the aisle, but it is rare to find one that exclusively contributes to just one party.  Enter the law firm of Duffy Amedeo.

Now it may be true that in love, "opposites attract," but in everything else "birds of a feather flock together."  Duffy Amedeo is a two lawyer firm in New York City.  One of those partners in Douglas Amedeo, the President of the Skylands Tea Party group.  His partner is described by Amedeo as "a liberal Democrat."  

Here's the question Mr. Amedeo needs to answer:  So of all the lawyers in the world, you left another law firm to make your career with someone you call a "liberal Democrat."  The two of you make money together and every political contribution that comes from your law firm goes to liberal Democrats -- thousands upon thousands of dollars in contributions, according to the Federal Elections Commission (FEC).

For most Republicans, hearing a potential business partner tell you that he contributed to Barack Obama might make them think twice.  But not Doug Amedeo -- so what you voted for Barack, our minds will still be in tune on the way we practice law, our outlook on the world, and on our perceptions about how government should interface with the private world of individuals and business. 

The Republican Party obviously does not matter much to Mr. Amedeo.  Expanding his law practice does, and since the beginning of our Republic, lawyers have been using politics to expand their law practices.  That's why they contribute thousands to politicians and political campaigns.

Amedeo reminds us of another lawyer -- Dan Perez.  He was a New York City lawyer too.  When he came to Sussex County he got busy.  A Democrat -- a very liberal Democrat -- he soon adopted the language to "pass" as a Republican.

He went after Republican control of Vernon Township, the county's largest municipality, and sued the GOP leaders there under the RICO law.  It was ridiculous, and the suit was dropped, but he did stir up enough trouble to drop the town's partisan elections -- and with it, Republican dominance.

Then he targeted some longtime Republicans on the Sussex County Community College board.  He was appointed to a vacancy.  His law practices contacts in the county were growing.

Perez became the political advisor and attorney for Freeholders Gail Phoebus and George Graham.  After Phoebus was elected to the Assembly and Graham took control of the Sussex County Freeholder Board, Dan Perez was appointed a commissioner at the Sussex County Municipal Utilities Authority (SCMUA) and the New York City law firm he had recommended got a $500,000 contract to "investigate" the solar deal.

Last week, Perez came out as a Democrat again.  He is running for Sussex County Freeholder on the Democrat ticket with another lawyer, Jennifer Hamilton.  And his law practice is doing just great!

Lawyers!  Lawyers are people who charge for one hour what a heavy equipment operator earns in a day, a clerk in a week, and a farmer in a month.  And they don't break a sweat doing it -- or produce anything besides paper and red tape.

*   *   *

It is clear that the current Tea Party group in Sussex County -- which was formed after a lawsuit and trial that split an earlier group in two -- is not there to help the Republican Party.  The Skylands Tea Party group refuses to endorse Republicans and did nothing in the way of political action for Congressman Scott Garrett when conservatives needed the Tea Party's help.  They invited him to speak at their meeting -- the same they do for liberal Democrats.

Anyone who was present or who has heard the recording of their February meeting knows how Skylands treats conservative Republicans -- they trash them and try to humiliate them and their families, in public.  Under its current leadership, the Skylands Tea Party group is at best a third party in Sussex County, suppressing the Republican vote, and at worse a Fifth Column, actively working with the Democrats to turn Sussex County liberal blue.

Until there is another party strong enough to represent conservative interests and win elections, the Republican Party is pretty much it.  Sussex County needs to have its own Republican Tea Party.  One that supports the party and understands its platform.  A Tea Party that endorses Republicans, not one that promotes Democrats.

Thursday
Jan262017

Will the Phoebus supporters please grow up

Bill Hayden is the "administrator" of the Gail Phoebus campaign on Facebook.  He and his co-administrator post some pretty idiotic stuff.  Like the faces of prominent Sussex County Republicans photo-shopped onto vaginas or an aerial view of what he thought was the house of a political opponent with the words "target acquired" underneath.  It turned out to be the wrong house and the home of an innocent family with children.

And posting pictures of your handguns on Facebook should not be done if you are going to use the same page to threaten people.  Also, it is not a good idea to claim to have handed out Halloween candy to children from a candy bowl stuffed with automatic magazines and Glock handguns.  This is stupid and it does your cause no good.

In your inarticulate ramblings, you claim to be "conservatives" -- well then act like traditional conservatives and not like juvenile delinquents.  Conservatives don't post pornography, they don't wave their guns around (even metaphorically on Facebook), and they don't write like members of the cast of Deliverance. 

Grow up!  And part of that growing up is coming to terms with some basic facts of life.  First, you or your candidate or your Tea Party are not the center of the universe.  You do not get to decide who is conservative or not, or who is Republican or not.   There are many people -- adult people -- who have come before you.  The world didn't begin yesterday, when you decided to show up and vote.

Second, just because you have a personal dislike for elected Republicans like Senator Steve Oroho and Assemblyman Parker Space, that doesn't make them "liberals".  It doesn't work that way.  They have the best pro-Second Amendment, Pro-Life, and consistent conservative voting records in Trenton.  And that is just how it is.

Third, just because you are loud, sport a bull neck, and talk about all your guns, it doesn't mean that you can intimidate anyone into ignoring the actual VOTING RECORDS of these conservatives.  When a Tea Party group ignores a conservative voting record, that doesn't make the conservative a liberal, it means the Tea Party group is liberal or ignorant or both. 

 In fact, it is your candidate who is being advised by the only genuine liberal on the scene -- a guy who was mentored by that Bill Ayers-loving Marxist William Kunstler, who lobbied Phoebus to vote pro-abortion, and who supported Barack Obama.  Here, check it out...

 

PEREZ, DANIEL M MR

WEST CALDWELL

NJ

07006

MARC ECKO ENTERPRISES

SPECIAL COUNSELOR

OBAMA, BARACK / JOSEPH R. BIDEN VIA OBAMA FOR AMERICA

12/06/2007

500.00

(SOURCE: Federal Elections Commission)

If you want to have an adult, non-pornographic, rational discussion about policy issues, I'm sure the people whose faces you have photo-shopped onto vaginas will put that aside, consider the source, and then have a constructive discussion with you.  They are adults.  That's what adults do.  You should try it sometime. 

Tuesday
Oct112016

Sussex County's Obama Republicans

Many county insiders know the story of how George Graham, now the boss of the Sussex County Freeholder Board, when an elected local official switched from Republican to Democrat in order to vote in the 2008 Democrat presidential primary between Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton.  Graham had been a Democrat before switching to Republican but later switched back to Republican, his current party today (from D to R to D to R). 

 

Graham is not alone.  In February, Daniel Perez got a plum appointment to be a Commissioner at the Sussex County Municipal Utilities Authority (SCMUA).  Those old-line GOPers probably had no idea that Perez was a donor to the presidential campaign of Barack H. Obama and Joseph R. Biden Jr.  An attorney, Perez' liberal views on abortion and other issues are not well known outside legal circles.

 

According to the SCMUA website:  "The SCMUA Board of Commissioners are appointed by the Sussex County Board of Chosen Freeholders.  Commissioners are appointed to serve a five-year term as provided for under NJSA 40:14B.  The Board of Commissioners serves as the governing body to the SCMUA which oversees the Sussex County Solid Waste Facility and the various wastewater treatment facilities, including the Upper Wallkill Water Pollution Control Facility.  Meetings are conducted in accordance with the NJ Open Public Meetings Act NJSA 10:4-6 et. seq. also known as the Sunshine Law."

 

Borough of Franklin Mayor and Facebook warrior Nicholas Giordano is another one.  Nominally a Republican, Mayor Giordano bragged on Facebook to constituents that he had voted for both Bill Clinton and Barack Obama.  The Mayor, who is said to be seeking a political appointment at SCMUA, has been a somewhat controversial figure in Franklin since replacing longtime Mayor Paul Crowley last year.

 

What's up with the Sussex County GOP?  Who is doing the screening?

Obama voter: Mayor Nicholas Giordano