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  • Yogi Berra On PURA -- It Ain’t Over Till It’s Over

    By Don Pesci
    October 3, 2025
    0
    Screenshot, Lamont and Gillett

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    Hartford paper reports, “UI’s [United Illuminating’s] continuing, harsh criticism of [PURA chairwoman Marissa] Gillett at the hearing and an energetic defense by Attorney General William Tong’s office suggest the contention between PURA and the utility industry that has grown during Gillett’s five years in office did not disappear with her decision a week ago to resign.”

    Gillett’s resignation from her post on September 19 likely will not put a period to an ongoing suit between Connecticut’s energy suppliers and PURA because the legal claims at issue are beyond the reach Governor Ned Lamont, a supporter of Gillett, and other advocates of price controls – which, we all know, have never worked in the long run to reduce prices. The contested issues can only be settled by a court. Gillett has magnanimously agreed to abstain from any decision made by PURA affecting the as yet unresolved suit until she leaves office on October 10.

    Gillett’s “decision to leave office,” we are told by the paper, “was the result of her bruising fight with the utility industry. In the two days immediately before her announcement, PURA belatedly produced email correspondence that the utilities had long sought and that Gillett had testified to the legislature months earlier did not exist.” Acknowledgment that it did exist – tucked neatly under a political bed -- led to a call for her impeachment and what Lamont characterized as her decision to resign. We don’t know whether someone in the Lamont administration gently tapped her on the shoulder and suggested she might move on.

    The “belated” production of the emails did not sit well with the presiding judge in the case who ordered PURA to comply with the commonly accepted terms of a court discovery process. Gillett claimed on different occasions during a painfully long delay 1) that her office had made a diligent search of emails demanded by the plaintiffs and found none; 2) that some requested emails had been deleted from a newly purchased phone set to automatically delete recorded calls after a few weeks had passed; 3) and finally, after Republican leader Vince Candelora had suggested a special council investigation might be in order, the emails requested by both plaintiffs in the case and a Hartford newspaper that had filed a Freedom of Information claim with the state, were at long last disgorged by PURA.

    Gillett has made no public statements for more than a year, according to the Hartford paper. “But her supporters [Governor Ned Lamont and Attorney General William Tong among them] have accused state regulated utilities of padding revenue at the expense of customers. Electric, gas and water utilities complained in response that PURA cut earnings to such a degree that their ability to deliver reliable service is at risk.”

    PURA is now limping forward with a two member board that had been expanded months ago by the partisan Democrat General Assembly to five members. All the members of PURA are appointed by the governor and affirmed by the General Assembly.

    “We’ve reached a point,” said Candelora, “where that authority can no longer operate, and electric rates are no lower, and in fact they are higher than they’ve ever been. And I think a lot of this is by the governor’s own doing.”

    Republicans in the General Assembly, vastly outnumbered by Democrats, are still permitted to speak freely in the highly partisan House and Senate chambers. “Still Revolutionary” Connecticut is yet mindful of the imprecations of Thomas Paine, author of “Common Sense,” a Revolutionary War pamphlet that pointed out the vital connection between free speech and democratic governance, but policy making in Connecticut, more often than not, is decided in a closed Democrat Party caucus room at the state Capitol.

    In collusion with Lamont, majority Democrats decided several weeks before her resignation to reappoint Gillett to the position she has now vacated. Her resignation leaves the PURA board without a chairman, and the board is now firing on two rather than five cylinders.

    “The shakeup,” CTMirror notes, “also opened new questions about whether PURA, with just two members, can vote and issue final decisions on rate cases or other pending matters. Currently, the authority is scheduled to issue final decisions later this year in three major cases: requests to raise utility rates by United Illuminating and Yankee Gas, as well as a proposed sale of the Aquarion Water Company to the South Central Connecticut Regional Water Authority.”

    So, where do we go from here? Back to where we came from, Lamont and the Democrat caucus room at the state Capitol have advised: “I need some folks with really strong analytical capabilities,” Lamont has said. Recent headlines and turmoil swirling around the PURA had complicated his recruiting effort, said Lamont. “People are worried about lawsuits and impeachment, so there’s some hesitancy. But we’re going to get it done as soon as we can.”

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