Page 8A NATION East Oregonian Friday, September 4, 2015 Thousands of gallons of oil spilled in Mississippi River Melissa Bowerman Ky. (AP) spilled into the river. The tow boats were transferred or moved. headed to November trial — River COLUMBUS, Part of the Mississippi The Coast Guard said moored on opposite sides “How this type of product was closed as crews it was working with the of the river and a long gash typically would react is that PORTLAND (AP) — The abuse charges in a separate trial for a woman accused of case involving the same sex abuse involving alleged victim. a 17-year-old boy The charges were on a track team she brought after coached at a central authorities obtained Oregon high new information. school has been Bowerman postponed. pleaded not guilty The Oregonian to those charges reports Melissa Wednesday. Bowerman’s trial Bowerman had been scheduled is married to to start Sept. 14 Bowerman Jon Bowerman, but is now set for the son of Nike Nov. 30. The 44-year-old is co-founder Bill Bowerman. charged with sexual abuse, Jon Bowerman previously using a child in a display of said he helped his wife coach sexually explicit conduct and the Madras High School luring a minor. track team and before that the Bowerman also faces sex Condon/Wheeler team. CREDITS: There has been no repercussions for energy of¿cials Continued from 1A the intent of lawmakers who wanted to prohibit the prac- tice. The energy agency also gave a competitive advantage to tax credit brokers who knew they could ignore the state’s published price rules. The proposed rule change, which would eliminate tax credit price regulations going back to mid-2012, would retroactively legitimize these deals. Pressure built in recent months for the energy agency to rethink the effort, as the Secretary of State’s Audits Division started to investigate and staff at the Oregon Legis- lature also sought to under- stand the reasons behind the proposal. Last week, lawmakers called on the agency to abandon its plan to retroac- tively change the rules. Rep. Phil %arnhart, D-Spring¿eld, is chairman of the House Committee on Revenue and said in testimony submitted to the Department of Energy that lawmakers wanted to prevent the deep discounts allowed by the agency’s chief ¿nancial of¿cer Anthony %uckley. “Unnecessarily large discounts on tax credit sales have frequently been noted as indicative of failure to get the best value for tax dollars, and we have therefore persistently focused on ways to restrict and reduce the low price sale of tax credits,” Barnhart wrote. “The conversations we’ve had and the statutes we’ve passed demonstrate clearly that we are interested in tax credit programs that do not give outsized payouts to private investors.” In response to the audit, Energy Department Director Michael Kaplan wrote Thursday that the department would allow temporary rules to expire Sept. 18, and “revert to the previous rules until given direction otherwise by the Legislature.” Brown said in a statement that it has “increasingly become clear, the Business Energy Tax Credit program, while developed with the best interests of the state in mind, was not managed to the stan- dard that Oregonians demand and deserve.” She said the administration would work with the Legisla- ture to clarify the rules. So far, however, there do not appear to be any reper- cussions for energy of¿cials who allowed people to ignore tax credit price rules. The Department of Energy has not disciplined any employees for allowing people to disregard published price regulations, according to spokeswoman Rachel Wray. Oregon issues tax credits as an incentive to renewable energy and ef¿ciency proM- ects to help offset capital costs. Recipients can use them to reduce taxes, or sell them to raise cash. Many tax credit recipients are governments and companies that do not owe state taxes, and a maMority of business energy tax credits issued from 2006 to 2014 were sold to investors. The Department of Energy issued tax credits worth $968.1 million during that period, and recipients sold $703.6 million worth of those credits, according to an analysis of Department of Energy data by the EO Media Group/Pamplin Media Group Capital Bureau. In an attempt to ensure the tax credits provide the maximum bene¿t for the proM- ects they are supposed incen- tivize, the Legislature passed a law in 2009 that required the Department of Energy to develop formula to set the sales prices of credits. The proposal the Department of Energy abandoned Thursday would have eliminated the formula. The agency already adopted a temporary version of the rule change in March, and Buckley and agency director Michael Kaplan told energy employees to process negotiated price tax credit sales even before the tempo- rary rule change because they planned to make it retroactive. Kaplan acknowledged in an internal email in February he was also aware of earlier tax credit sales that violated state price regulations. “This effective date will recognize past activities, but we are not certain at this time how far back this recognition will be,” Kaplan wrote in a Feb. 17, 2015, email to employees who oversee the tax credits. Kaplan wrote that he had asked Buckley to research how far back the retroactive rule change should extend. However, Kaplan and other Department of Energy employees have been unwilling to identify which tax credits were sold for less than the required price. Kaplan did not respond to the EO Media Group/Pamplin Media Group Capital Bureau’s request for the results of Buckley’s research on the issue. Kaplan did acknowledge in an email that he knew since he was appointed acting director of the agency in May 2014 that people were buying and selling tax credits at larger discounts than allowed under state regulations. “When I was appointed acting director in May 2014, I recognized the need for the change, but this and other policy and administrative decisions, in my view, needed to be made by a permanent agency director,” Kaplan wrote in an email. “When I was appointed agency director in November 2014, I pursued this and other issues that had been identi¿ed as needing to be ¿xed. That’s what this comes down to: our agency has a responsibility to improve the way we do our work; if our rules are unclear, we ¿x them. If our processes need to be better de¿ned, we do that.” Lawmakers will likely learn more about the Depart- ment of Energy’s actions when they hold interim meetings Sept. 28 through 30. Barnhart asked Oregon’s Legislative Revenue Of¿ce this summer to review the Oregon Department of Energy’s handling of the tax credits and Chris Allanach, a senior economist who works on tax credits, said he expects to present the results of his research on the subMect later this month. As recently as an Aug. 25 public hearing, energy of¿cials appeared determined to implement their retroactive rule change before lawmakers hear the report. “The Oregon Department of Energy will make the ultimate decision regarding these rules,” said Elizabeth Ross, an energy policy analyst who is overseeing the agency’s rule change, at the public hearing. “The rules will be effective upon ¿ling for September. We hope to do this prior to the expiration of the temporary rule on Sept. 18, 2015.” investigated an oil spill caused by the collision of two tow boats, the U.S. Coast Guard said Thursday. The collision Wednesday evening near Columbus, Kentucky, damaged at least one barge carrying clari¿ed slurry oil. The cargo tank was ruptured, causing thousands of gallons of oil to spill into the river, the Coast Guard said. No inMuries were reported. The river is closed from mile markers 938 to 922, Petty Of¿cer Lora Ratliff said. The barge was carrying approximately 1 million gallons, but the breach was only in one area, affecting Must one of its six tanks, Ratliff said. That tank holds 250,000 gallons, and Lt. Takila Powell said a little more than 120,000 gallons barge owner, Inland Marine Services, and an oil spill response organization. Inland Marine Services referred calls to its public relations person, Patrick Crowley, who did not return repeated calls seeking comment. Both tow boat operators had been interviewed by Coast Guard investigators and underwent drug and alcohol testing, but results aren’t back yet, Powell said. It wasn’t known how long the river would be closed. “We are working diligently to try to restore our marine transportation system,” Powell said. “We understand that it is vital.” The Coast Guard deter- mined ¿ve barges were damaged in the collision, but nothing other than the oil leaked into the river, Powell said. was apparent in the smaller vessel. River traf¿c was backed up on both sides, though it wasn’t yet known how many vessels were backed up. By Thursday evening, there was no sign of a large cleanup operation. Powell said cleanup efforts had started with the barge and that crews put a boom around the ruptured cargo tank to prevent any residual oil from leaking into the river. Cleanup crews Friday will go into the river to try to determine where the oil is, with a goal of trying to recover as much of the oil as possible from the river. Some oil was recovered from the surface during cleanup operations Thursday, Powell said, but she didn’t know how much. Powell said the oil is thick and has to be heated to be when it reaches the water that is of a lower tempera- ture, it would solidify and sink,” she said Thursday. “But one of the things that we will be doing tomorrow is trying to determine where that oil has migrated to, to try to determine whether or not it has moved down the river or if it’s still in the vicinity of where the collision occurred.” The collision happened in the middle of the river channel near Columbus, Kentucky, late Wednesday, the Coast Guard said. The cause was under investiga- tion. The closure stretched 17 miles south to the city of Hickman. Powell said it was hard to say how much of the oil was released mid-channel because the barge was even- tually pushed up to the bank. GUARANTEED to beat VERIZON & AT&T PLUS, UNLIMITED CONTRACT PAYOFF Just bring in your bill and we’ll beat your current Verizon or AT&T plan, or you’ll get a $50 Promo Card. Plus, take advantage of our unlimited contract payoff. 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