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Sunday, March 19, 2000



Gore Allies' Ties to Power Agency Are Questioned Politics: Links
contrast with efforts to cast vice president as reformer.  Undue
influence is denied.

By ALAN C.  MILLER,
Times Staff Writer
NOXVILLE, TENN.

The Gore family ties to the Tennessee Valley Authority run nearly
as deep as the raging waters that the sprawling New Deal-era
agency has tamed.


Former Sen.  Al Gore Sr.  defended the federal electric power and
planning agency based in his home state from vitriolic attack in
the 1950s, and his son, Vice President Al Gore, has been a
staunch ally as a member of Congress and vice president. So the
younger Gore was right at home on April 29, 1995, when he came to
Tennessee to present TVA with a coveted Hammer Award--a wooden
hammer wrapped in a red-white-and-blue bow--for streamlining
government and becoming "one of the premier examples of
reinvention anywhere in the United States." But there is another
chapter in recent TVA history that Gore did not mention that day:
the awarding of lucrative contracts and jobs to key operatives in
the vice president's fund-raising and political network,
sometimes through controversial practices. Critics say this side
of TVA's record is more suggestive of the old-fashioned spoils
system than Gore's much-touted ideal of modern governmental
efficiency and professionalism.  The agency's leadership has come
under fire by its inspector general and a traditionally
supportive congressional delegation for awarding contracts
without competitive bids and failing to hold consultants
accountable. The number of those close to Gore who received TVA
contracts is small, but telling.  The beneficiaries during Gore's
tenure as vice president include two former chiefs of staff to
Gore who remain presidential campaign advisors, Gore's former
state director from his U.S.  Senate office and a longtime
Nashville political supporter.

Providing Favors an Age-Old Practice As Gore and Texas Republican
Gov.  George W.  Bush continue their march toward securing the
presidential nominations of the two major political parties this
summer, both candidates will face close scrutiny of their
respective records as public officials.

Providing jobs and favors for supporters is an age-old practice
in politics.  But, for the vice president, the appearance that
TVA was used as a patronage preserve for Gore loyalists contrasts
with efforts by his presidential campaign to cast the Tennessee
native as a political reformer.

"TVA has always maintained the idea it is above that sort of
political horse-trading," said William Bruce Wheeler, a
University of Tennessee history professor and co-author of a book
on TVA.  "To have non-bid consulting contracts and cronyism
really disgusted a lot of [longtime] TVA people."

Gore was on vacation and could not be reached, spokeswoman Laura
Quinn said Saturday.  She said Gore played no role in the
awarding of any TVA contracts.

TVA is an unusual institution in American governance: a federal
corporation with responsibilities spanning parts of seven
Southern states.  Founded by Congress in 1933, it has harnessed
the Tennessee River and its tributaries, poured economic
development funds into the region's poor, rural communities and
emerged as the nation's largest provider of electricity.

The agency's entire $6.6-billion budget comes from supplying
low-cost, wholesale electricity to 159 distributor-customers,
including municipalities and retailers.

Although Congress ended its annual federal funding for non-power
programs in 1999, TVA still pays no federal income tax.
The agency carries a $26-billion debt, a legacy of a post-1960s
nuclear program fraught with problems.

Since 1993, TVA has been embroiled in numerous financial and
management controversies.  Asked recently whether he still
considered TVA an ideal laboratory for government reinvention,
Gore backpedaled from his earlier assessment.

"I don't know if the '95 statement is fairly characterized as an
over-praising," he said.  "I'll acknowledge that there are a lot
of problems that remain and they have a lot of work to do."
Among the recipients of TVA contracts were Peter Knight, Gore's
lead campaign fund-raiser and former top aide, and Jack Quinn,
another ex-Gore chief of staff.

Knight signed a no-bid contract for "advice and assistance" with
TVA in 1993 that paid his firm $680,856 over six years.  And
Quinn received a TVA consulting contract after leaving the White
House that paid his firm $707,253 over 2 1/2 years.
The contracts to friends of Gore were awarded during the tenure
of two TVA directors appointed by President Clinton with Gore's
backing.  One is Johnny Hayes, who has served as finance chairman
for Gore's House, Senate and presidential campaigns since 1978.
Hayes defended the contracts.

"These were high-quality people," said Hayes, who left TVA last
year to become national finance chairman for Gore's presidential
campaign.  "These were people who did their work.  It's not
old-fashioned cronyism.  It reflects that you get the best people
you can to help you."

Gore put his stamp on the agency after becoming vice president in
1993.

Hayes, 59, a former Tennessee commissioner of economic
development and insurance executive, was recommended by Gore for
the $115,400-a-year post as TVA director.

Gore concurred with former Tennessee Sen.  James Sasser's
recommendation for Clinton to appoint as chairman Craven Crowell,
a former chief of staff to Sasser who was Gore's city editor at
the Tennessean.  For six years, Crowell and Hayes were the
majority of the three-member board.

At Gore's urging, Clinton appointed Skila Harris, an Energy
Department official and former aide to Gore and his wife, Tipper,
to succeed Hayes last year.

This places Gore in a bipartisan tradition of elected
leaders--including former Senate Majority Leader Howard H.  Baker
Jr.  (R-Tenn.)--who have promoted confidants for the TVA board,
which wields vast authority over the politically potent agency.
And Gore has not forsaken the agency as vice president.  His
office keeps tabs on TVA concerns and Gore helped it win federal
approval to refinance part of its debt in
1998.

The vice president is "a very strong supporter of TVA issues,"
said David Withrow, who heads the agency's Washington office.
Gore credited the TVA board with avoiding electric rate
increases, reducing the work force and stabilizing finances and
Hayes with doing "an excellent job."

Of Crowell, Gore said: "Craven's role as chairman has been more
controversial."

Crowell and other senior TVA administrators declined to be
interviewed.  It was the decision by TVA management to give
no-bid contracts to well-connected consultants that prompted a
two-year review by the agency's internal watchdog.

Even though TVA is well represented in Washington with a
supportive 38-member congressional delegation and a full-time,
six-person Capitol Hill office, the agency awarded
lobbying-consulting contracts to two of Gore's closest advisors.
Knight was retained in mid-1993, just after Crowell and Hayes
took office, and Quinn followed in mid-1997, shortly after
stepping down as White House counsel.

'A Gold Rush in Giving Out Contracts' Knight was Gore's longtime
House and Senate chief of staff and managed his 1988 presidential
and 1992 vice presidential bids and the 1996 Clinton-Gore
reelection effort.  Together, he and Hayes have helped Gore raise
more than $43 million for his U.S.  Senate and presidential
campaigns since 1984.

"When Hayes and Crowell came on board, it was pretty much a gold
rush in giving out contracts to political associates and hiring
political friends," said a former veteran TVA employee, who
insisted on anonymity but whose comments were echoed by other
ex-colleagues.

Following a review of consulting and training contracts in late
1997, TVA Inspector General George T. Prosser cited a "public
perception of favoritism" and "a lack of TVA oversight and
controls which allowed certain consultants to make excessive
profits, overbill and sometimes be unaccountable for their
services and charges." He reported that, since late 1992, TVA had
more than 600 such large contracts worth $145 million--more than
80% without competitive bids.

In his review, Prosser conducted a detailed examination of a
small number of the largest TVA contracts.

These did not include any of the pacts with Gore allies. Both
Knight and Quinn were chosen for their knowledge of Washington,
said Stephen N.  Bender, TVA's vice president for communications.
He added that "having a relationship with the vice president or
the administration is not a bad thing." TVA officials say Quinn
and his associates provided valued assistance on proposed
electric power deregulation, a potentially serious threat to TVA.
Knight consulted on various matters with TVA officials, primarily
in Tennessee. Knight's contract called for him to "provide advice
and assistance in connection with TVA's programs" to board
members and other officials for a $5,000 monthly retainer, which
was soon doubled.  The contract was renewed annually until it was
terminated by mutual consent in September as Knight prepared to
dissolve his firm.

In 1997, following Prosser's report, TVA announced contracting
reforms and a review of current sole-source contracts.  The value
of Knight's contract was challenged by TVA executives, two
current and former officials said.

"Folks at TVA tried to put a stop on that contract three or four
times.  They questioned why we had the contract when he's not
producing anything," said a TVA official familiar with these
events.  "They were told: 'If Johnny says we can't kill it, we
can't kill it.' " Hayes said he could not recall being asked
about Knight's contract and denied telling anyone to extend it.
"Peter gave a lot of good advice and that's all I'm saying,"on
deregulation, although "the vice president is critical to issues
like this." Quinn said he "devoted an enormous amount of time to
this project."

Under ethics rules adopted by the Clinton administration, Quinn
is prohibited from lobbying Gore and other White House officials
until 2002.

Quinn's contract ended last year when he left his firm to start
his own company; he recently signed a new contract to advise TVA
on deregulation and other Washington issues.  TVA said the amount
and terms of the contract were not immediately available.

Both Knight and Quinn have played key roles in Gore's
presidential campaign.  Knight was the architect of Gore's
fund-raising operation; Quinn vetted questionable donors and
fund-raisers.

Another recipient of a large TVA contract also has long supported
Gore in his home state--James E. Lawson was paid $461,869 by the
agency during a four-year period ending in September.

Lawson said he has knocked on doors, made phone calls and raised
"a few thousand dollars" since Gore's tenure in the House and
continues to work on Gore's presidential bid.  The Nashville
resident contributed $1,000, the legal maximum, last year. In
1995, TVA's Economic Development program--which Hayes helped
oversee--awarded Lawson a no-bid contract to assess TVA's
minority business development programs and recommend ways to
leverage TVA's efforts with other organizations.  A former bank
executive who had served on a TVA advisory council on minority
economic development, Lawson had recently founded a one-person
consulting firm.

Lawson said his support for Gore played no role in winning the
Lawson was paid $461,869 by the agency during a four-year period
ending in September.

Lawson said he has knocked on doors, made phone calls and raised
"a few thousand dollars" since Gore's tenure in the House and
continues to work on Gore's presidential bid.  The Nashville
resident contributed $1,000, the legal maximum, last year.
In 1995, TVA's Economic Development program--which Hayes helped
oversee--awarded Lawson a no-bid contract to assess TVA's
minority business development programs and recommend ways to
leverage TVA's efforts with other organizations.  A former bank
executive who had served on a TVA advisory council on minority
economic development, Lawson had recently founded a one-person
consulting firm.

Lawson said his support for Gore played no role in winning the
contract but refused to discuss this process.  "TVA looked to me
because I had the background, the experience .  .  .  the
knowledge base," he said.
Hayes also said he could not recall assisting Lawson in obtaining
the contract.

TVA spokesman John Moulton said Lawson made recommendations,
provided training and delivered various reports under the
contract.  He said if TVA needs such services in the future,
under its new contracting procedures, the agency will seek them
through an open competitive process.

Among the contracts that TVA began dispensing in 1993 were large,
no-bid public relations pacts to friends and former associates of
Crowell in particular--even though the agency had a sizable
in-house team devoted to those activities.
At the time, another member of Gore's inner circle was already on
board.

In late 1992, TVA retained the Nashville public relations firm of
Mark McNeely, a Knoxville native who was Gore's state director
when he was in the Senate and was active in his 1988 presidential
campaign.

McNeely, who had done work for TVA since 1988, was to provide
"advice and assistance in connection with the new presidential
administration" of Clinton and Gore, the contract said.
TVA extended McNeely's contract through September 1996.  The firm
was paid $109,645.

On Nov.  1, 1997, TVA granted the firm a new no-bid contract.
Shortly thereafter, Prosser released his report lambasting TVA's
contracting procedures.  In response, TVA announced consolidation
of its outside public relations services into one publicly bid
contract and McNeely's pact was canceled.

McNeely said he was hired for his "knowledge, experience, skill,
the ability to give good, sound advice."
Of his connection to Gore, he said, "I don't think it hurt."


The TVA's Reach The Tennessee Valley Authority, created by
Congress in 1933 to develop the Tennessee River and its
tributaries, is the nation's largest producer of electricity.  It
serves nearly 8 million people in a seven-state region.

Source: Tennessee Valley Authority

Times researcher John Beckham in Chicago contributed to this
story.

Hayes said, refusing to cite any examples. "Peter certainly
earned his keep."

Knight, who claimed a grasp of TVA issues after working with Gore
in Congress, declined comment. But one individual familiar with
the arrangement said that, when the controversy erupted, Knight
offered to step aside and Crowell insisted that he stay on.
Quinn's involvement with TVA was less controversial, but more
rewarding.  His connections to Gore go back to Gore's 1988
presidential bid.  More recently, he served as vice presidential
chief of staff.  He returned to his Washington law firm to head a
public policy group in early 1997.

Contract Spells Out Ally's TVA Role Quinn's TVA contract included
"a monthly management fee" of $15,000 for overseeing members of
his group; his associates billed TVA by the hour.  The contract
called for them to provide "political and governmental affairs
counseling" and develop "strategic plans" on utility
deregulation.

Bender said three other firms were interviewed for the contract,
but declined to identify them.

Quinn said he did not believe Gore even knew he worked with TVA .




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       Shalom, A Salaam Aleikum, and to all, A Good Day.
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