Sunday, May 9, 2010 —
N.C. Senator Stan Bingham of Davidson County and Yadkin Riverkeeper Dean Naujoks have asked the state to investigate the possibly illegal lobbying efforts on behalf of Alcoa in the ongoing dispute concerning the Yadkin Hydroelectric Project.
In a letter to N.C. Secretary of State Elaine Marshall, Bingham and Naujoks question the conveyance of 2.5 acres of waterfront property to Jones last year by Alcoa. They also say that their investigation of Rowan County tax records show that no taxes were paid when the property was conveyed to Jones.
Bingham and Naujoks contend that before the land conveyance, Jones met state senators and representatives in their offices to defend Alcoa. They have also asked the state to investigate whether Jones failed to file a registration statement and a quarterly expense report as required of lobbyists. They say that records cannot be found, and that as a result, Jones should be barred from lobbying.
They also say that prior to 2007, Jones was a staunch critic of Alcoa, then abruptly switched his allegiance in 2007.
Then, last year as the General Assembly considered the adoption of Senate Bill 967, which would set up a Yadkin River Trust to oversee the operations of the project, Jones lobbied against the bill's passage with what Naujoks calls “misinformation.”
The transfer of the property from Alcoa to Jones became public record in a Jan. 31, 2010 letter from Marshall Olson, environmental and natural resource manager for Alcoa, to Kimberly D. Bose, secretary of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC). The letter stated that Alcoa conveyed three tracts of land totaling approximately 2.5 acres to Jones and his wife in Rowan County on Oct. 20, 2009.
“Larry may not have only violated state law, he may also have benefitted personally from a land deal from Alcoa while claiming to represent the best interests of High Rock Lake Association,” said Sen. Bingham.
“We want to know it laws were broken,” Naujoks said. “We want to know why the county tax records indicate no taxes were being paid for the transfer of valuable High Rock Lake property to Jones from Alcoa. We want to know when these negotiations for the land transfer between Jones and Alcoa began.”
When asked to comment on the allegations, Alcoa spokesperson Joyce Fitzpatrick responded: “Alcoa has not received a copy of the letter so it is difficult to address what is claimed. However, Alcoa has complied fully with all registration and reporting requirements under the NC lobbying laws.
“Alcoa's dealings with Larry Jones have been straightforward and unrelated to his role with the High Rock Lake Association. This land transaction took place more than 2 1/2 years after the High Rock Lake Association signed the Relicensing Settlement Agreement in support of a new license for Alcoa, and with the full knowledge and support of the High Rock Lake Association's Board of Directors. It was properly and in a timely manner disclosed in Alcoa's annual land conveyance report filed with FERC.
“Alcoa has been a good steward of the Yadkin River and has the support of lakefront property owners, environmental groups, state agencies and the staff of FERC to continue generating clean, renewable hydropower. We take our environmental responsibilities seriously and will continue our efforts to improve water quality and enhance recreation around the lakes.”
Alcoa News Updates
Questionable land transfer by Alcoa comes under attack
- Alcoa News Updates
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Questionable land transfer by Alcoa comes under attack
N.C. Senator Stan Bingham of Davidson County and Yadkin Riverkeeper Dean Naujoks have asked the state to investigate the possibly illegal lobbying efforts on behalf of Alcoa in the ongoing dispute concerning the Yadkin Hydroelectric Project.
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Alcoa must agree to environmental investigation
Now that Alcoa has announced the permanent closure of its Badin Works smelting plant, the company must allow for the proper and necessary environmental investigation of the site before it runs away with profits from our water and leaves us with a toxic mess.
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What have the commissioners done to this county?
Things happen in very interesting ways.
As we plan for the 100th birthday of Badin, Alcoa announces it will be shutting down and demolishing the Alcoa plant.
Very ironic when you think that the town of Badin was started because of the plant. The town was started by the French and then bought by Americans, and today is a worldwide company. Alcoa has been a good employer and steward of the people and the land. -
Candidates weigh-in on Alcoa, dams
As the May 4 Primary gets closer, local candidates are weighing-in on the Yadkin Hydroelectric Project and leaving no doubt where they stand. At Thursday evening’s Millennium Club Forum, the seven Republican candidates for county commissioner left no gray matter in where they stood.
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Alcoa to close Badin Works
Alcoa announced this week that it will permanently close two idle smelting plants, including the Badin Works plant in Badin. This is a step that will allow Alcoa to continue moving forward with its ongoing plans to redevelop the Badin Works site to attract new industry and new jobs to Badin and Stanly County, officials said in a press release
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Riverkeeper to paddle Yadkin to raise awareness in battle against Alcoa
The Yadkin Riverkeeper has announced plans to paddle the Yadkin River in April from Caldwell County to the Pee Dee River connection near the South Carolina border to raise awareness of the battle against Alcoa’s relicensing of the Yadkin Hydroelectric Project as well as the increasing pressures the Yadkin faces that threaten its vitality from human development, habitat degradation and sedimentation issues.
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Commissioners respond to Alcoa attack
Editor’s Note: Friday the Stanly County Commissioners responded to the latest ad campaign from Alcoa regarding the Yadkin Hydroelectric Project and the ongoing relicensing battle. The statement from the commissioners is run in its entirety.
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War for Yadkin Project heats up
In March 2008 as the clock approached the midnight hour and Alcoa Power Generating, Inc. (APGI) seemingly had a second 50-year lease in hand to control the four dams on the Yadkin River, approximately 200 citizens from Stanly County march-ed outside the General Assembly in Raleigh in protest.
Delivering their position, County Commissioner Lindsey Dunevant said: “We don’t want to give away our water rights for the next 50 years.”
In response, then Gov. Mike Easley asked the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) to award APGI a one-year license, not a 50-year one, giving all involved another year to study the issue. - Response to Naujoks letter I want to provide your readers with some factual information to refute the unfounded allegations about Alcoa’s environmental record that were made by Yadkin Riverkeeper Dean Naujoks in a Dec. 1 letter (“Let’s focus on the real issues regarding the Yadkin River Hydroelectric Project”).
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Give back the Yadkin
The Yadkin, the state's second largest river (only the Cape Fear is bigger), is a gentle giant as it traverses the northwest foothills from Wilkesboro to Elkin to Pilot Mountain State Park in Surry County. From there, it turns south toward Salisbury, gathering size and force from its various tributaries until, passing the Uwharrie mountain range, it's squeezed from 1,000 feet wide to less than 100 feet in the gorge known as "the Narrows." Over a 38-mile stretch from above High Rock Mountain to just below the Narrows, the Yadkin falls almost 400 feet in elevation, further concentrating its power.
- More Alcoa News Updates Headlines
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