COLUMBUS (AP) — Ohio’s top utility regulator, Samuel Randazzo, resigned Friday morning, a day after the state’s largest electric utility reported to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission that former executives had directed a $4 million payment to the consulting firm of an official who fits Randazzo’s description.
Randazzo, 71, submitted his resignation letter to Republican Gov. Mike DeWine, who had appointed him chairman of the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio and the Ohio Power Siting Board in February 2019.
Randazzo said in the letter dated Friday that the “events and news of this week have undoubtedly been disturbing or worse to many stakeholders.”
FBI agents were seen carrying boxes from Randazzo’s Columbus townhome during a search on Monday.
Randazzo in his resignation letter said the search and SEC filing by FirstEnergy Corp. “will, right or wrong, fuel suspicions about and controversy over decisions I may render in my current capacity.”
A spokesperson with the utilities commission did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Friday.
The FBI has not said whether the search of Randazzo’s home is tied to a federal investigation of a $60 million bribery scheme secretly funded by FirstEnergy Corp. to win legislative passage of a $1 billion bailout for two nuclear plants. Until February, the plants were operated by a wholly owned FirstEnergy subsidiary.
At an unrelated news conference on Friday, DeWine thanked Randazzo for his service saying, “He has done very, very good work as chair.” His office said in a statement that it would name another commission member as acting chair.
In the filing, FirstEnergy said former top executives had directed the payments in early 2019 to a consulting firm “in connection with the termination of a purported consulting agreement” in place since 2013. The payments violated FirstEnergy’s policies, the filing said.
The recipient of the millions is “an entity associated with an individual who subsequently was appointed to a full-time role as an Ohio government official directly involved” in regulating FirstEnergy, the filing said.
The company has fired five top executives in the last month, including CEO Chuck Jones.
The dual role of utilities commission and siting board chair is one of the most powerful positions in state government, wielding extraordinary influence on matters regarding the regulation of utilities in the state to include utility profits and rates charged to customers. The siting board has oversight approval for new electric-generating facilities in the state.
Bruce Weston, executive director of the Ohio Consumers’ Counsel said in a statement on Friday said utility consumers “may think the regulatory system is rigged against them.”
“Things need to change and that change should begin with real reform of how PUCO commissioners are appointed and who gets appointed in the state,” the statement said.
Consumer groups Ohio Consumers Power Alliance and Ohio Citizen Action said they hoped Randazzo’s resignation and “the cloud of corruption” that surrounded this week’s events would be the push legislators need to repeal the nuclear plant bailout legislation known as House Bill 6.
“Sam Randazzo’s ties to FirstEnergy influenced decision after decision at the PUCO and sabotaged the growth of Ohio’s clean energy future,” Rachael Belz, who directs both organizations, said in a statement.
Vice Chairman M. Beth Trombold will move into the commission’s top spot, the PUCO said in a statement. The Public Utilities Commission Nominating Council, on which Randazzo served before being appointed chairman, is charged with beginning the process of filling the vacancy.
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Gillispie reported from Cleveland.