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What if Troutman Sanders hires Kelliher's chief of staff?
. . . what about Dan Larcamp?
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution (AJC) confirmed that
Dan Larcamp has taken a job with Troutman Sanders, Southern Co's law
firm.
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Does it matter?
The AJC identified
a whistle blower, as FERC's Rich Heidorn, who had complained to Rep
Henry Waxman, D-Calif, that Larcamp had inserted himself into what
the paper called "a sweetheart deal" favoring Southern.
By that it
was meant that he had decided to drop a case against Southern and
settle after Chairman Pat Wood had left the commission.
The Democrats
-- especially Waxman -- may want to ask Larcamp about that.
But the AJC
has asked him and Larcamp replied that he can't be questioned for
at least a year and faces a lifetime ban on anything he's worked on
behind the scenes.
Troutman Sanders
Managing Partner Bob Webb was quoted by the AJC as being delighted
to hire Larcamp.
"He's
a lawyer with great experience in the energy area. We represent a
lot of energy clients," Webb was quoted as saying.
What's the
FERC view?
David Ratcliffe,
Southern Co CEO was at the last panel as FERC looked into improvements
needed in southeastern power markets but he wasn't asked about Larcamp.
Ratcliffe
reminded the agency that Southern Co, "fully supports wholesale
competition."
The firm's
goal, he added, is to reliably provide power "to retail and wholesale
customers."
When Southern
is able to buy power cheaper than it can self- generate, it buys the
power, he added.
But Ratcliffe
believes in more than one model to establish wholesale competitive
markets and until one has been shown to be better than another FERC
should allow regions to pick the one they like best.
Critics have
complained that Southern doesn't provide opportunities for competition.
"At least
in Southern Co's case the evidence is clear that competitive markets
are robust and active.
"In 2006
for example Southern Co purchased over 4 million mwh of power from
third parties worth over $230 million to replace" generation
Southern would have had to generate.
Buying that
power saved $23.5 million in 2006, he said.
It's clear
that EPSA CEO John Shelk doesn't see the wholesale market as the old-fashioned,
natural monopoly "that justifies exclusive franchises traditional
rate regulation.
He reminded
FERC that wholesale competition is the law of the land and that's
a settled national policy.
“Competitive
suppliers have invested tens of billions of dollars in generators
as Congress intended, but wholesale competition can't exist without
access to consumers.
He cited an
interview with Dominion's CFO in the Wall Street Journal where his
view was that a utility should not only get a return on capital spent
but a profit too where a project fails.
QUOTE OF THE DAY: Wholesale
market structures are a means to an end and that end is to provide
benefits to end use retail customers... That (EPACT) is the law of
the land... Let there be no mistake. NARUC as an organization, all
50 states and several other affiliates are supportive of open-access,
non- discriminatory wholesale market structures. We are protective
of the jurisdiction that is properly ours but there is no question
of our support for functioning competitive wholesale markets.
James Yancey Kerr, president
of NARUC
BOTTOM
LINE: What does Larcamp issue really mean? We’re not
attorneys.
Certainly
if Troutman Sanders approved the new job for Chairman Kelliher’s
chief of staff it’s cricket.
Will the move
get the chairman in the soup with congressional Democrats? We suspect
not.
FERC may simply
be too far down on Democratic radar screens.
Besides, we
can’t imagine anyone in the South standing up to Southern Co
and certainly no one at FERC could or would -- especially after what
happened to Pat Wood.
It’s
hard to imagine Larcamp not discussing his planned move with Kelliher
and we assume that Kelliher gave his OK.
The chairman
then issued a news release praising Larcamp for his distinguished
service.
True, the
move doesn’t look good but that’s how Washington works.
Originally published
in Restructuring Today
on March 1, 2007
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