Records: Ohio governor’s aides knew of pro-drilling plan

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Top advisers to Republican Gov.
John Kasich knew the Ohio Department of Natural Resources planned to
discredit environmental groups and two lawmakers while promoting
drilling in state parks and forests in 2012, new records show.
Top
administration officials met with department leaders about the plan,
the governor’s spokesman acknowledged Tuesday. Invitees to that meeting
included Kasich’s chief policy adviser, chief of staff, legislative
liaison and then-environmental czar Craig Butler, whom Kasich recently
appointed to lead the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency.
Spokesman Rob Nichols downplayed his earlier claims that the administration had no knowledge of the plan.

"I
don’t know what specific pieces of paper different people saw a year
and a half ago, but of course the administration is going to coordinate
and plan ahead on an important issue like gas production on state land,"
he said in an email.
The department said the plan was only discussed and never implemented.
A
memo outlining the communications strategy was released Friday. It
labeled the so-called eco-left, including the Sierra Club, Ohio
Environmental Council and others as adversaries. Halliburton and other
energy companies the department is charged with regulating were named as
allies, as were national, local and state chambers of commerce.
The
proposal, created by a senior department official assigned to special
projects, suggested enlisting allied groups to counteract "zealous
resistance by environmental activist opponents, who are skilled
propagandists."
A final draft was dated Aug. 20, 2012, the same
day a state email indicates that Kasich’s top policy adviser, Wayne
Struble, had scheduled a meeting on the matter. Asked Tuesday whether
the meeting took place, Nichols said, "I think so, yes."
ProgressOhio,
a liberal group that joined in the Sierra Club’s release of the
documents, called it a "Nixonian" government-enemies list.
Among
those targeted were Democratic state Reps. Robert Hagan and Nickie
Antonio, who on Tuesday called for Ohio House hearings on the matter.
The pair called the strategy memo improper and unprecedented.
"The
governor is quick to jump in bed with Halliburton and the oil and gas
companies, with no apparent regard for the legitimate concerns of Ohio
citizens," said Hagan, of Youngstown. "This document raises a lot of
questions regarding taxpayer resources being used to play politics, and
taxpayers deserve answers."
Nichols questioned their outrage.
"Representative
Hagan and the Sierra Club — one of the largest, secretly-funded groups
on the planet — have a pact to try and kill the fracking jobs that are
helping get Mr. Hagan’s own communities back on track," he said. "It’s
pretty hard to reason with folks bent on that kind of self-destruction."
The
memo theorized that Ohio families would be vulnerable "to messaging by
opponents that the initiative represents dangerous and radical state
policy by Gov. Kasich." It anticipated that environmentalists would
attempt to slant news coverage, incite public panic over health risks
and physically halt drilling.
At the same time, the memo noted
that partnering with drilling interests "could blur public perception of
ODNR’s regulatory role in oil and gas."
The department has not
said who ordered the proposal to be drafted, how much it cost, or
whether any outside organization was involved. Natural Resources
spokesman Mark Bruce said Friday the plan was more than a year old and
he was not aware of how it came about.
The plan singles out Halliburton among energy companies to be considered allies.
State
records show Halliburton’s lobbyist in Ohio is Dwayne Siekman, a vice
president at The Strategy Group Company, whose Delaware, Ohio, address
he lists on his registration. The firm’s sister company, Strategy Group
for Media, handles Kasich’s political communications. A representative
said Tuesday the firm had no role in crafting the state plan.
Ohio opened state parks and other public lands to drilling in 2011, but has not acted on the new law.
Nichols
said the law called for a state oil and gas commission to be created to
authorize drilling activity, but Kasich has opted not to appoint the
panel yet because the governor doesn’t believe the regulatory structure
around the practice is mature enough.
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