Garbage, garbage everywhere

CRRA, the Connecticut Resources Recovery Authority, is a quasi-public and, some would say, quasi-corrupt state agency that has been disposing of Connecticut garbage one way or another for 40 years.Scandal-plagued in the Rowland years, the CRRA is remembered for having survived a $220 million deal with that fabled monument to corporate excess, Enron. The deal, called an illegal loan by then Attorney General Richard Blumenthal, seemed pretty good when Enron seemed pretty good. If it had worked out, Enron would have taken the $220 million up front from CRRA and repaid it over 10 years or so, along with $100 million more to the CRRA for its trouble. Unfortunately, Enron only completed the taking of the $220 million part before it declared bankruptcy, so CRRA attempted to cover the loss with higher garbage recycling fees for its 70 member cities and towns. They sued and CRRA was forced to pay them tens of millions more. And now, CRRA is back in the limelight for another questionable, though far less monumental, caper.It’s being sued by a lobbyist who claims the agency showed “favoritism, fraud and corruption” when it renewed the contract of its current lobbyist without first interviewing and considering the merits of the losing lobbyist’s firm.This is an interesting argument because state law prohibits agencies like CRRA from employing lobbyists. But don’t think for a minute that anything illegal is going on here because the CRRA’s lobbyist isn’t called a lobbyist; he’s a municipal liaison. A municipal liaison is, of course, a lobbyist with another name but so long as the municipal liaison isn’t known as a lobbyist, it’s legal to hire him or his company. Or so they say.u u uThe CRRA’s municipal liaison is Thomas D. Ritter, who is extremely well connected for lobbying by any name, having been a speaker of the Connecticut House of Representatives and the kind of person insiders call an insider. He says he isn’t a lobbyist because he’s paid a flat fee for his municipal liaisoning and volunteers as a lobbyist on the side. Wink, wink.Matthew Hennessey, the lobbyist whose firm lost out to Ritter’s, is not an insider of Ritter proportions, though he was a prominent member of former Hartford Mayor Eddie Perez’s quasi-corrupt administration. The newspapers call him a Democratic strategist, which is also what they call those guys on cable news who tell us what they read about politics in the New York Times and Washington Post without crediting their sources.Hennessey’s suit is also interesting because it seeks an injunction “prohibiting CRRA from hiring outside lobbyists” but it also wants the Court to give his firm the municipal liaison contract even though the municipal liaison appears to be an outside lobbyist. But Hennessey performed a valuable public service when his desire for this illegal job called attention to the illegal job itself. Whatever Ritter does, he’s earned about a quarter of a million dollars doing it since 2006. Hennessey is claiming in his suit that CRRA has violated the law against employing lobbyists but he’s also saying he was unfairly denied the job that’s illegal in the first place. Think about that.In 2011, the CRRA board, whose members are appointed by the governor and leaders of both parties in the Legislature, renewed Ritter’s contract for three years over the objection of only two board members, West Hartford Mayor Scott Slifka, who is no longer on the board and Barkhamsted First Selectman Don Stein, now the board’s chairman.Slifka, an attorney, told The Hartford Courant he thought employing a municipal liaison violated the spirit of the law against lobbyists and did not, in fact, “pass the smell test.” Stein said his objections were financial. “I didn’t feel that spending money on a municipal liaison was necessarily a good use of the money,” he told The Courant. “It had nothing to do with Mr. Ritter, who I’ve met once for three minutes at a meeting or Mr. Hennessey, who I’ve never met.”It may seem strange to you that a board member and now chairman has only had one, three minute meeting with the man who has been the agency’s liaison/lobbyist but it certainly explains why the chairman figured spending money on him was unnecessary. Gilbert and Sullivan would have loved this plot. I can hear it now ... “I am the very model of a mu-ni-ci-pal li-a-i-son.”Simsbury resident Dick Ahles is a retired journalist. Email him at dahles@hotmail.com.

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