FERC Complaint Request Fast Track
FERC Complaint Request Fast Track
Exhibit 83: 104 FERC 61,103, US, FERC, 18 CFR Part 35,[Docket No. RM02-1-000; Order No. 2003], Standardization of Generator
Interconnection Agreements and Procedures, (Issued July 24, 2003), 20030724-0460 Issued by FERC OSEC 07/24/2003 in Docket#: RM02-1-000
2
Exhibit 84:106 FERC 61,220, USFERC 18 CFR Part 35, (Docket No. RM02-1-001; Order No. 2003-A), Standardization of Generator
Interconnection Agreements and Procedures (Issued March 5, 2004), 20040305-0407 Issued by FERC OSEC 03/05/2004 in Docket#: RM02-1-001
3
Exhibit 85: Appendix 6 to the Standard Large, Generator Interconnection Procedures, STANDARD LARGE GENERATOR INTERCONNECTION
AGREEMENT (LGIA), 20040305-0407 Issued by FERC OSEC 03/05/2004 in Docket#: RM02-1-001
4
Exhibit 86: APPENDIX B, STANDARD LARGE GENERATOR INTERCONNECTION PROCEDURES (LGIP) including STANDARD LARGE GENERATOR
INTERCONNECTION AGREEMENT (LGIA), Standard Large Generator Interconnection Procedures (LGIP) (Applicable to Generating Facilities that
exceed 20 MW),20040305-0407 Issued by FERC OSEC 03/05/2004 in Docket#: RM02-1-001
5
Exhibit 87: 109 FERC 61,287, US FERC, 18 CFR Part 35 (Docket No. RM02-1-005; Order No. 2003-B) Standardization of Generator
Interconnection Agreements and Procedures (Issued December 20, 2004), 20041220-3068 Issued by FERC OSEC 12/20/2004 in Docket#: RM021-005
6
Exhibit 88: 111 FERC 61,401, US FERC, 18 CFR Part 35, (Docket No. RM02-1-006; Order No. 2003-C) Standardization of Generator
Interconnection Agreements and Procedures (Issued June 16, 2005) 20050616-3071 Issued by FERC OSEC 06/16/2005 in Docket#: RM02-1-00
7
Exhibit 89: Appendix A, Flow Chart of the Large Generating Facility Interconnection Process, 20030724-0461 Issued by FERC OSEC 07/24/2003
in Docket#: RM02-1-000
8
Exhibit 90: APPENDIX C, STANDARD LARGE GENERATOR, INTERCONNECTION PROCEDURES (LGIP) including STANDARD LARGE GENERATOR
INTERCONNECTION AGREEMENT (LGIA), 20030724-0463 Issued by FERC OSEC 07/24/2003 in Docket#: RM02-1-000
PUBLIC VERSION
PRIVILEGED AND CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION REMOVED
PURSUANT TO 18 C.F.R. 388.112
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
BEFORE THE
FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY COMMISSION
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Sage Grouse Energy Project, LLC
)
Docket No. EL15-___-000
Docket No. RM02-1-000; Order No. 2003
18 C.F.R 385.206(a) Complaints (Rule 206) (a) General rule. Any person may file a complaint seeking Commission action
against any other person alleged to be in contravention or violation of any statute, rule, order, or other law administered by the
Commission, or for any other alleged wrong over which the Commission may have jurisdiction.
10
Sage Grouse Energy Project, LLC successor in interest to Summit Wind Power, LLC collectively (Sage Grouse")
11
Pacificorp identified in its published 2013 Integrated Resource Plan (IRP), Volume 1, Table 6.1 - Cumulative Wind Selection
Limits by Year that by 2017 an allocation of at least 200 MW of wind energy will be used to service its customer base, see
excerpt of Pacificorp 2013 IRP, Table 6.1 attached as Exhibit 1. PacifiCorp seeks to own all of the generation facilities from its
Current Creek Facility in Mona, Utah to the last critical substation on its Transmission System, Pinto Substation, in San Juan
County Utah. PacifiCorp is engaged in trickery and schemes to ensure that the only two (2) competitors seeking open access to
its Transmission System are prevented from accessing the Interconnection and Transmission Capacity, thereby ensuring
preservation of PacifiCorps monopolistic stranglehold in the Western and Northwestern United States.
12
Pursuant to Docket No. RM02-1-000; FERC Order No. 2003, Standardization of Generator Interconnection Agreements and
Procedures, Issued July 24, 2003 Pacificorp adopted FERC Order 2003 Appendix C, Standard Large Generator Interconnection
Page 2 of 116
FERC Orders for the Standardization of Generator Interconnection Agreements and Procedures,
including FERC Order 2003; 5) engage in trickery including the submission of subtle
misrepresentations of tariff language sufficient to alter and change the original meaning and
intent of the tariff; 6) engage in activities and practices that include acts against individuals in
protected classes such as race, color, religion, sex and even citizenship and immigration status as
defined in Civil Rights and Anti-Discrimination Laws; 7) Disparaging treatment with respect to
PacifiCorp requiring Sage Grouse to produce additional information in excess of the mandated
requirements in order to process Sage Grouses Interconnection Request 8) the processing of an
invalid Interconnection Request for a PacifiCorp favored Interconnection Customer, Blue
Mountain Power Partners, LLC (Blue Mountain BMPP)13 on parcels of land whereby the
developmental rights for said parcels of land belong to Sage Grouse. 9) the processing of an
invalid Interconnection Request for a PacifiCorp favored Interconnection Customer, Latigo
Wind Park, LLC (Latigo)14 on land where a transmission cable from the Interconnection
Customers Generating Facility Collector Substation to the Point of Interconnection, Pinto
Substation crosses land whereby the developmental rights belong to Sage Grouse.
Procedures (LGIP) including Standard Large Generator Interconnection Agreement (LGIA), Standard Large Generator
Interconnection Procedures (LGIP), Applicable to Generating Facilities that exceed 20 MWs.
13
Blue Mountain BMPP, held a position on the LGIA Queue with a Queue of No. 418 and currently holds Queue No. 426 on the
LGIA Queue. In both Interconnection Requests, Blue Mountain BMPP did not have Site Control for all of the parcels of land it
represented as part of its Project, and submitted parcels of land whereby the development rights for the land are owned by
Sage Grouse Energy Project, LLC. See Exhibit 2 for Queue No. 0418 see page 7 of 9 of PacifiCorps OASIS, dated July 24, 2013;
and for Queue No. 0426 see page 8 of 9 of Exhibit 2, all of the specifics of the Projects, including the Location of the
Interconnection are identical.
14
Blue Mountain BMPP, held a position on the LGIA Queue with a Queue of No. 418 and currently holds Queue No. 426 on the
LGIA Queue. In both Interconnection Requests, Blue Mountain BMPP did not have Site Control for all of the parcels of land it
represented as part of its Project, and submitted parcels of land whereby the development rights for the land are owned by
Sage Grouse Energy Project, LLC. See Exhibit 2 for Queue No. 0418 see page 7 of 9 of PacifiCorps OASIS, dated July 24, 2013;
and for Queue No. 0426 see page 8 of 9 of Exhibit 2, all of the specifics of the Projects, including the Location of the
Interconnection are identical.
Page 3 of 116
Page 4 of 116
15
Exhibit 3: 20040305-0407 Issued by FERC OSEC 03/05/2004 in Docket#: RM02-1-001, FERC LGIP (FERC LGIP) Page 6, Section
1 Definitions: and Page 122 of Pacificorps Open Access Transmission Tariff (OATT) (IV)(36) Definitions: Interconnection
Request shall mean an Interconnection Customer's request, in the form of Appendix 1 to the Standard Large Generator
Interconnection Procedures, in accordance with the Tariff, to interconnect a new Generating Facility, or to increase the capacity
of, or make a Material Modification to the operating characteristics of, an existing Generating Facility that is interconnected
with the Transmission Provider's Transmission System
16
Exhibit 4: FERC LGIP: Page 9, Section 1, Definitions and Page 125 of OATT (IV)(36) Definitions: Site Control shall mean
documentation reasonably demonstrating: (1) ownership of, a leasehold interest in, or a right to develop a site for the purpose
of constructing the Generating Facility; (2) an option to purchase or acquire a leasehold site for such purpose; or (3) an
exclusivity or other business relationships between Interconnection Customer and the entity having the right to sell, lease or
grant Interconnection Customer the right to possess or occupy a site for such purpose
17
Exhibit 5: FERC LGIP: Page 14, Section 3.3.1 Initiating an Interconnection Request. To initiate an Interconnection Request,
Interconnection Customer must submit all of the following: (iii) demonstration of Site Control
18
Exhibit 5: OATT (IV)(38)(3)(1)(iii): To initiate an Interconnection Request, Interconnection Customer must submit all of the
following: (iii) demonstration of Site Control
19
Exhibit 6: FERC LGIP: Page 15, Section 3.3.3 and Page 133 of OATT (IV)(38)(3)(3): 3.3.3 Deficiencies in Interconnection
Request. An Interconnection Request will not be considered to be a valid request until all items in Section 3.3.1 have been
received by Transmission Provider.; Items in Section 3.3.1 are on Page 14 of the FERC LGIP and Page 132 of the OATT, Initiating
an Interconnection Request. To initiate an Interconnection Request, Interconnection Customer must submit all of the following:
(i) a $10,000 deposit, (ii) a completed application in the form of Appendix 1, and (iii) demonstration of Site Control or a posting
of an additional deposit of $10,000.
20
Exhibit 7: March, 2012, Letter from PacifiCorps Tom Fishback, Large Generation Interconnection Queue Manager
acknowledging receipt and determining the Interconnection Request for Blue Mountain Power Partners, LLC , Queue #0418, is
deemed complete
21
Exhibit 7: July 2, 2012, Letter from PacifiCorps Tom Fishback, Large Generation Interconnection Queue Manager
acknowledging receipt and determining the Interconnection Request for Blue Mountain Power Partners, LLC, Queue #0426 is
deemed complete.
Page 5 of 116
22
Ellis-Hall Consultants, LLC and Sage Grouse Energy Project, LLC are both Interconnection Customers that have refused to
sell their projects to PacifiCorp, or a PacifiCorp affiliate and have thereby categorized as unfavorable by Pacificorp.
23
Exhibit 8: FERC LGIP: Page 17, Section 3.6 Withdrawal. if Interconnection Customer fails to adhere to all requirements of
this LGIP Transmission Provider shall deem the Interconnection Request to be withdrawn
24
Exhibit 8: FERC LGIP: Page 135-136 and OATT (IV)(38)(6) Withdrawal: if Interconnection Customer fails to adhere to all
requirements of this LGIP,Transmission Provider shall deem the Interconnection Request to be withdrawn
25
Exhibit 9: FERC LGIP: Page 8, Section 1, Definitions and Page 125 of OATT (IV)(36) Definitions: Queue Position shall mean the
order of a valid Interconnection Request, relative to all other pending valid Interconnection Requests, that is established based
upon the date and time of receipt of the valid Interconnection Request by the Transmission Provider.
26
Exhibit 10: FERC LGIP, Page 17, Section 3.6 Withdrawal. Withdrawal shall result in the loss of Interconnection Customer's
Queue Position.
27
Exhibit 10, Page 136 of OATT (IV)(38)(6). Withdrawal: Withdrawal shall result in the loss of Interconnection Customer's
Queue Position.
Page 6 of 116
Specifically, PacifiCorp knew 28 and 29 that Blue Mountain BMPP does not and cannot
demonstrate the requisite Site Control for all the parcels of land submitted in Blue Mountain
BMPPs Interconnection Request for the purpose of constructing a Generating Facility 30 and the
required Interconnection Customer Interconnection Facilities 31. In fact, PacifiCorp knows that
Sage Grouse owns the developmental rights to most of the parcels of land that Blue Mountain
BMPP submitted in each of its Interconnection Requests. PacifiCorp, therefore, accepted and
deemed complete Blue Mountain BMPPs speculative Interconnection Requests in order to
ensure Blue Mountain BMPP was assigned a higher Interconnection Queue position above Sage
Grouse, unreasonably relying on a blind hope that Blue Mountain BMPP would eventually gain
control of the Sage Grouse parcels32.
By Definition, Queue Position shall mean the order of a valid Interconnection
Request, relative to all other pending valid Interconnection Requests, that is established based
upon the date and time of receipt of the valid Interconnection Request by the Transmission
Provider33. Blue Mountain BMPP does not have a valid Interconnection Request, therefore its
28
Exhibit 11: Copy of April 23, 2012 note card and the Master Tax Roll Records issued from the San Juan County Recorders
Office identifying the parcels of land under contract with Sage Grouse mailed to Tom Fishback, Pacificorps Large Generation
Interconnection Queue Manager, pursuant to Mr. Fishbacks request.
29
Exhibit 12: Copy of April 5, 2012 Letter from Mrs. Bonnie G. Meyer, Trustee to Tom Fishback, PacifiCorps Large Generation
Interconnection Queue Manager, advising the Trust did not have a contract with REDCO and had a contract with Sage Grouse.
30
Exhibit 13:FERC LGIP, Page 4, Section 1, and Page 119 of OATT (IV)(36) Definitions: Generating Facility shall mean
Interconnection Customer's device for the production of electricity identified in the Interconnection Request, but shall not
include the Interconnection Customer's Interconnection Facilities;
31
Exhibit 14:FERC LGIP, Page 5 Section 1 and Page 121 of OATT (IV)(36)Definitions: Interconnection Customer's Interconnection
Facilities shall mean all facilities and equipment, as identified in Appendix A of the Standard Large Generator Interconnection
Agreement, that are located between the Generating Facility and the Point of Change of Ownership, including any
modification, addition, or upgrades to such facilities and equipment necessary to physically and electrically interconnect the
Generating Facility to the Transmission Provider's Transmission System. Interconnection Customer's Interconnection Facilities
are sole use facilities;
32
A scheme exists whereby the participants seek to force Sage Grouse to abandon its project and let go of its developmental
rights in the parcels of land it controls in San Juan County.
33
Exhibit 15: FERC LGIP, Page 8 Section 1, and Page 125 OATT (IV)(36) Definitions: Queue Position shall mean the order of a
valid Interconnection Request, relative to all other pending valid Interconnection Requests, that is established based upon the
date and time of receipt of the valid Interconnection Request by the Transmission Provider.
Page 7 of 116
Queue position assignment is fraudulent. Such fraudulent assignment of Queue Position, reduces
the reliability of the Interconnection Processing Queue and the integrity of the information
sourced from the Interconnection Processing Queue (IPQ) by potential Interconnection
Customers. Pacificorp, as the gate keeper for the IPQ is the only party that would truly know
whether or not and which information can be relied upon. Any other Interconnection Customer,
or member of the public, is unable to make that determination, thereby providing PacifiCorp with
a mechanism by which they can discourage or even prevent the open access to its Transmission
System, based upon the information interested parties can receive due to Pacificorps reporting
practices, and verification standards. Only Pacificorp is in the position, an unfair position, to
determine the viability and likelihood of a projects success and completion. All other parties are
relegated to their reliance on the IPQ. Allowing fraudulent reservations to be part of that
reporting process can likely serve to discourage investigatory actions in that area, however,
Pacificorp would be free to pursue the area due to its insider knowledge of its reporting
standards.
Mountain BMPP to finalize the reservation and allocation of the Interconnection Capacity,
before PacifiCorp would be required to do so with Sage Grouse. Sage Grouse submitted its
Interconnection Request in early 2012. This submission was behind Blue Mountain BMPP at
Queue #0418, and behind Ellis-Hall Consultants (Ellis-Hall) at #0420. PacifiCorp had already
assigned Blue Mountain BMPP a Queue Position of #0418, and deemed complete its
Interconnection Request, which included Sage Grouse parcels of land. Blue Mountain BMPP
was already a higher queued position, than both Sage Grouse and Ellis-Hall. However, Blue
Mountain BMPP speculated that it would be able to secure all eighteen (18) of the REDCO
perfected and expired Option Agreements. These Option Agreements were listed by REDCO as
assets of its Bankruptcy Estate. Relying on this assumption, based upon its efforts with
Pacificorp and other conspirators, Blue Mountain BMPP pre-maturely submitted its
Interconnection Request inclusive of the eighteen (18) Option Agreements.
Blue Mountain BMPP had successfully secured the higher queue position, however it
was incorrect in its speculative assumption that it would secure all eighteen (18) of the REDCO
Option Agreements because Ellis-Hall had just purchased six (6) of the Core Option Agreements
outside the REDCO Bankruptcy from the reconstituted entity of REDCO insiders that had
purchased these six (6) from the bankruptcy. Ellis-Hall was, therefore, a bona-fide purchaser.
Ellis-Hall purchased the six (6) Options on February 23, 2012. Blue Mountain BMPP submitted
its Interconnection Request, with the 18 agreements on March 16, 2012. Clear title of the six (6)
Options had already passed to Ellis-Hall. The remaining twelve (12) had not yet had any
determination made regarding their fate. Yet, Blue Mountain BMPP clearly had a confidence
instilled in it from, somewhere, a co-conspirator, which allowed it to proceed with such
confidence as to confidently complete a pre-mature Interconnection Request submittal with
Page 9 of 116
eighteen (18) contracts it had absolutely no rights to whatsoever. Blue Mountain BMPP should
be required to reveal said information to the Commission, for the Commission to determine
whether or not the actions involving that information fall within its regulatory authority.
Ellis-Hall submitted its Interconnection Request, asserting ownership and Site Control as
required by FERC LGIP and the OATT. PacifiCorp deemed it complete on or about March 18,
2012. However, now Blue Mountain BMPP and Pacificorp had a problem, a serious problem.
The Blue Mountain BMPP Interconnection Request, included parcels of land that
belonged to Sage Grouse, AND parcels of land that belonged to Ellis-Hall. PacifiCorp had
refused to process Sage Grouses Interconnection Request and required Sage Grouse to secure
clear and convincing evidence of its Site Control. PacifiCorp also required Sage Grouse to
produce letters of authorization from the land owners, despite not requiring any other
Interconnection Customer to provide such documentation, which is not required by FERC LGIP
or OATT. In addition, PacifiCorp had deemed complete the Ellis-Hall Interconnection Request.
These factors, all changing the footprint of the Blue Mountain BMPP Interconnection Request,
were material and required Blue Mountain BMPP to proceed with a new Interconnection
Request34
Blue Mountain BMPP having start over with a new Interconnection Request, would likely
be behind Sage Grouse. PacifiCorp then engaged in trickery to prevent Sage Grouse from
asserting Interconnection Request, affording Blue Mountain BMPP the time it needed to prepare
to re-submit.
This is why PacifiCorp, at any cost, had to keep Sage Grouse from submitting its
Interconnection Request before Blue Mountain BMPP could re-submit its own. PacifiCorp
34
Exhibit 16:FERC LGIP, Page 20, 4.4.3 and Page 139-140 OATT (IV) (39) (4)(3): Interconnection Customer may then withdraw
the proposed modification or proceed with a new Interconnection Request for such modification.
Page 10 of 116
advised Sage Grouse it was not going to process the Interconnection Request due to its leases
being contentious. PacifiCorp failed to inform Sage Grouse that it had already processed Blue
Mountain BMPPs Interconnection Request on the same Sage Grouse lands.
Pacificorp then allocated the remaining 80 MW of available Interconnection Capacity to
Blue Mountain BMPP; and, thereby, instantaneously forced Sage Grouses project bear the
significant costs of required Interconnection Network Upgrades. This would effectively kill
Sage Grouses project, and PacifiCorp would be back on track to securing the Sage Grouse
parcels of land because PacifiCorp concluded, that Sage Grouse would abandon its Project and
PacifiCorp, Blue Mountain BMPP, or another PacifiCorp shill could then secure the soon to be
abandoned Sage Grouse project and proceed with its higher Queued Position through either
Blue Mountain or a shill of their choosing on the Interconnection Process.
PacifiCorp is, while safely cloaked in the appearance of compliance, employing
trickery to lock out Sage Grouse from open access of its Transmission System. This is precisely
the type of conduct that PURPA, FERC Order 890 and other regulatory requirements seek to
prohibit and remedy.
PacifiCorp has also abused FERCs Confidentiality Provisions to conceal Blue
Mountains deficient demonstration of Site Control.
Page 11 of 116
Exhibit 11.
36
Exhibit 17: Blue Mountain Power Partners, LLC is the successor in interest to Cedar City Wind Holdings, LLC. Both are wholly
owned subsidiaries of Champlin Windpower, LLC.
37
Exhibit 11.
38
Exhibit 18: FERC LGIP, Page 4, Section 1 and Page 119 -120, OATT(IV)(36) Definitions: Good Utility Practice shall mean any of
the practices, methods and acts engaged in or approved by a significant portion of the electric industry during the relevant time
period, or any of the practices, methods and acts which, in the exercise of reasonable judgment in light of the facts known at
the time the decision was made, could have been expected to accomplish the desired result at a reasonable cost consistent
with good business practices, reliability, safety and expedition. Good Utility Practice is not intended to be limited to the
optimum practice, method, or act to the exclusion of all others, but rather to be acceptable practices, methods, or acts
generally accepted in the region.
Page 12 of 116
D. RESOLUTION REQUEST
Sage Grouse requested PacifiCorp to simply memorialize in writing that Blue Mountain
BMPPs Interconnection Request, its Generating Facility and Interconnection Customers
Interconnection Facilities did not rely on, include, or use the Sage Grouse parcels of land in
either of its Interconnection Requests. PacifiCorp refused stating FERC Confidentiality
Requirements and non-disclosure agreement provisions prevented it from doing so.
PacifiCorp advised Sage Grouse it was making an unreasonable request when asking PacifiCorp
to violate Confidentiality Provisions. Sage Grouse responded advising that memorializing the
information was not unreasonable, particularly in light of the fact that on November 27, 201239,
PacifiCorp did memorialize the status of Site Control between Ellis-Hall #420 and Blue
Mountain BMPP #426.
In an email from Tom Fishback to Kimberly
Hi Kimberly,
We took a third or fourth look at the site control documentation submitted with the
Q0420 and Q0426 applications.
Although the projects are in close proximity to each other, the submitted site control
documentation illustrates different locations and different lessors.
Thanks Kimberly
Tom Fishback
PacifiCorp did not find that such disclosure violated the Commissions Confidentiality
Provisions. Sage Grouse merely asked for the same disclosure and was denied. Such denial
wanes at the fact that Mr. Fishback on prior occasions stated that the Option Agreements
[expired Option Agreements] that Sage Grouse was proposing to use in its Interconnection
39
Exhibit 19: November 27, 2012 email from Tom Fishback to Kimberly regarding the Site Control issue.
Page 13 of 116
Request were contentious. Sage Grouse advised it would not be relying on expired Option
Agreements to establish its Site Control; it would be using its fully executed Lease Agreements.
PacifiCorp continued to maintain the subject land was contentious. The mere disclosure of
contention could obviously denote that other projects were asserting claims to the development
rights of this land. It appears PacifiCorp had other reasons, outside of Confidentiality Provisions
for its continued refusal to comply with Sage Grouses simple request. These other reasons,
appear to be the reasons for PacifiCorp refusing to process Sage Grouses initial attempts to
submit an Interconnection Request, and memorialize that Blue Mountain BMPPs two
Interconnection Requests did not contain any use of or reference to Sage Grouses lands.
To date, PacifiCorp has refused to memorialize the same information request to Sage
Grouse.
Sage Grouses Site Control concerns stemmed from Blue Mountain BMPPs submission
of two (2) separate Conditional Use Permit Applications to the San Juan County Planning
Department for hearings on August 2, 201240 and October 4, 201241. Blue Mountain BMPPs
submissions made publicly available maps detailing the Generating Facility footprint, parcel
40
Exhibit 20: Revoked due to Site Control, the Blue Mountain BMPP Conditional Use Permit (CUP) Application identified Blue
Mountain BMPPs Generating Facility and Interconnection Customer Interconnection Facility footprints, revealing Blue
Mountain BMPPs intent to erect wind generation turbines on Sage Grouses land. The 1st Blue Mountain BMPP CUP
Application hearing was August 2, 2012 included all seven (7) of the Sage Grouses Land Owners, representing close to 5200
acres of land. It was revoked September 4, 2012. The San Juan County Commissioners revoked Blue Mountain BMPPs
Conditional Use Permit due to BMPPs lack of ownership or control of the lands Blue Mountain BMPP represented as its own.
41
Exhibit 21: Revoked due to Site Control, the Blue Mountain BMPP CUP Application identified Blue Mountain BMPPs
Generating Facility and Interconnection Customer Interconnection Facility footprints, revealed Blue Mountain BMPPs intent to
erect wind generation turbines on Sage Grouses land. The 2nd Blue Mountain BMPP CUP Application hearing was on October
4, 2012 included two (2) of Sage Grouses Land Owners, representing close to 2010 acres of land. The San Juan County
Commissioners, again, revoked Blue Mountain BMPPs Conditional Use Permits due to BMPPs lack of ownership or control of
the lands Blue Mountain BMPP represented as its own.
Page 14 of 116
locations, landowner names, copies of the expired REDCO Option Agreements, acreage, wind
generator turbine layout, cable configuration, point of interconnection, connector and collector
substation locations, and other critical project information, as well as a comprehensive project
overview identifying the wind turbine model and manufacturer, the energy generation output, its
relationship with PacifiCorp, various schedules and other activities necessary to complete its
project, etc. All of this information is required for an Interconnection Request, and Blue
Mountain BMPP made it publically available. PacifiCorp was therefore, not at risk for violating
said confidentiality provisions they claimed to rely on.
Sage Grouses provided PacifiCorp with both copies of the Blue Mountain BMPP
Conditional Use Permit Applications and again requested the PacifiCorp merely memorialize in
writing, that Blue Mountain BMPP had not included any of its lands in its Interconnection
Request. After receiving the documentation from Sage Grouse, PacifiCorp again, refused to
substantiate Blue Mountain BMPPs claim of Site Control, stating that the claim can be taken at
face value, and that FERCs Site Control standards are low, minimal, require no due
diligence, and that we [PacifiCorp] owe no obligation to disclose whether Blue Mountain
BMPPs Interconnection Request complied with FERC or OATT Site Control requirements to
Sage Grouse due to FERCs Confidentiality Provisions. PacifiCorps refusal is improper for a
number of reasons, the least of which is because the requested information was already publicly
available or made publicly available through Blue Mountain BMPPs Conditional Use Permit
Applications and Blue Mountain BMPP's various public presentations, including a tax abatement
request42 from the County. Therefore, this information is, no longer confidential. FERC LGIP
42
Exhibit 22: Blue Mountain BMPP Tax Abatement Presentation before San Juan County Commissioners on March 17, 2014. It is
important for the Commission to note the partnership between both PacifiCorp favored Interconnection Customers/QF
Owners Blue Mountain Power Partners, LLC and Latigo Wind Park, LLC as illustrated by the Confidential Map. Attached as
Exhibit 23.
Page 15 of 116
13.1.1.143 and OATT(IV)(48)(1)(1)44 Sage Grouse was and continues to only be concerned with
whether its land parcels have been or are being used without its permission or authorization, by a
competing Interconnection Customer for their Interconnection Request. As such, PacifiCorp has
no justification to withhold information substantiating Blue Mountain BMPPs reasonable
demonstration of Site Control. Unless, of course, PacifiCorp intends to hide that Blue Mountain
BMPPs Site Control relied on Sage Grouses land and that Blue Mountain BMPPs
Interconnection Request was, therefore, nonexistent. FERC LGIP Section 1. Definitions:
Interconnection Request;45 OATT (IV)(36) Definitions. Interconnection Request46.
PacifiCorps failure to comply with its OATT is damaging Sage Grouse because Sage
Grouse is now being forced accept inaccurate and unreliable LGIP Study Results, and significant
Network Upgrade charges. PacifiCorp actions are an undermining of FERCs policies to
promote Open Access to Pacificorps Transmission System to all small generators. In addition,
PacifiCorps conduct threatens the very viability of Sage Grouses Project by requiring Sage
Grouse to bear the millions of dollars of significant costs associated with System Network
Upgrades that Sage Grouse would not be required to bear if PacifiCorp complied with FERC
Order 2003 and its OATT.47
43
Exhibit 24: FERC LGIP: Page 37, Section 13.1.1 and Page 163 OATT(48)(1)(1) Scope. Confidential Information shall not include
information that the receiving Party can demonstrate: (1) is generally available to the public other than as a result of a
disclosure by the receiving Party;
44
Exhibit 25: FERC LGIP: 41, Section 13.1.10 and Page168, OATT (48)(1)(10) This provision shall not apply to any information that
was or is hereafter in the public domain (except as a result of a Breach of this provision).
45
Exhibit 3
46
Exhibit 3
47
PacifiCorp has adopted a position that Blue Mountain BMPPs Interconnection Request now does not rely on
Sage Grouses land. This is the only position Pacificorp can advance, in light of their actions, or inactions. The
explicit use of the work NOW is indicative of the favorable treatment for the benefit of Blue Mountain BMPP to
the detriment of Sage Grouse. The Commission should be aware that Blue Mountain BMPPs Interconnection
Request for Interconnection Queue Position No. 418 & No. 426 originally relied on Sage Grouses land. After
PacifiCorp deemed complete Blue Mountain BMPPs Interconnection Request and completed the LGIP Study
Process, it executed an Interconnection Agreement. Now, PacifiCorp purports to have allowed Blue Mountain
Page 16 of 116
BMPP to change its entire project footprint, inclusive of its Generating Facility and its Interconnection Customer
Interconnection Facilities and claims such alleged change is merely an adjustment despite many, many
PacifiCorp employees advising Sage Grouse such is a material change and requires a completely new
Interconnection Request, in addition to the FERC Order and the OATT requiring the same. Sage Grouse has
declined offers to allow for Step In procedures to be part of this project. PacifiCorps assertions are not logical
given the circumstances of the situation. Why would a change be necessary if Sage Grouse's land was not being
used, initially? Pursuant to FERC 2003 and OATT such a change requires an entirely new Interconnection Request
or at the very least constitutes a material modification, which requires an entirely new Interconnection Request.
Page 6, FERC LGIP and Page 122, OATT (IV)(36) Definition Interconnection Request.
As well, Pacificorp is not being forthcoming because the PPA PacifiCorp negotiated appears to rely on the original
footprint of the Interconnection Request, which includes Sage Grouse land by name in the attachment sections of
the emails. See emails attached as Exhibit 26 between Paul Clements and Michael Cutbirth. It is becoming
increasingly clear that the original Interconnection Request included Sage Grouses land and this was use to
provide an Indicative Pricing Proposal and execute the PPA. As well as, block Sage Grouses opportunity to be a
Qualified Facility QF. Such trickery regarding Site Control, and PacifiCorps collaborative efforts to purchase the
Blue Mountain BMPP Project, and attempt the Sage Grouse project. Blue Mountain has been afforded several
Point of Interconnection changes and specialized leapfrog assistance from PacifiCorp, in an attempt to quash the
project Sage Grouse will be connecting into.
In a March 17, 2014 presentation for a tax abatement before the San Juan County Commissioners, Blue Mountain BMPP
admitted that land it once represented it had the rights to develop, in reality, it does not... Mr. Tom Boyd, Esq. stated "Another
interesting thing about this slide is that one of the things that has negatively impacted the project in the past several months
is that we have pretty lost this land owner pretty central, crucial land owner to the project. Its Utorha Land and
Cattle...We couldnt quite see eye-to-eye, and so weve had to kind of squash some turbines together. Weve sort of got two
(2) turbines here that are a little close together a little close together down here. It definitely negatively impacts the
performance of the project, but we have gone so far I mean, we this is the final site plan." This change is evidenced by
their own presentation and the maps they presented.
Exhibit 27 for the series of maps and the multiple Site Control modifications Blue Mountain BMPP has made. These maps
are all publically available, and clearly identify Blue Mountain BMPP does not have the requisite Site Control it has
represented, while maintaining an allocation of 80 MW of Interconnection Capacity and 80 MW of Transmission Capacity as
well. The Commission and the OATT do not provide for a Project to make critical modifications or to continually make
material modifications as such. The Conditional Use Permit Map (whereby the permit allows construction on this footprint) is a
completely different foot print than the Interconnection Request Map and the PPA Map.
Page 17 of 116
I.
A. INTRODUCTION
Sage Grouse is a Qualified Facility ("QF") within the meaning of the Public Utility
Regulatory Policies Act of 1978 (PURPA). On August 26, 2014, Sage Grouse submitted an
Interconnection Request for an LGIA that PacifiCorp accepted and processed. PacifiCorp
assigned Sage Grouse Interconnection Queue Position. On September 2, 2014, PacifiCorp
deemed complete Sage Grouses Interconnection Request. On October 7, 2014, Sage Grouse and
PacifiCorp conducted the required Scoping Meeting. During this meeting, Sage Grouse again
explained to PacifiCorp that higher positioned QFs on the Interconnection Queue, one such QF,
Blue Mountain BMPP, had submitted an Interconnection Request, which was not complete
because it lacked a reasonable demonstration of Site Control. As explained herein, Blue
Mountain BMPPs Interconnection Request improperly relied on parcels of land that it does not
own but that belong to Sage Grouse. Sage Grouse also notified PacifiCorp that it had improperly
failed to give Blue Mountain BMPP the requisite notice that this Interconnection Request was
and remains deficient, and that Pacificorp failed to require Blue Mountain BMPP to post the
additional $10,000 as required by the OATT for lack of Site Control.
Page 18 of 116
Sage Grouse further stated to PacifiCorp that, because Blue Mountain BMPPs Site
Control is deficient, PacifiCorp is required to withdraw Blue Mountain BMPPs Interconnection
Request and, thereby, a loss of Blue Mountain BMPPs Interconnection Queue Position. Sage
Grouse further explained that if Blue Mountain BMPP did not lose its Interconnection Queue
Position, Sage Grouses Interconnection Studies would be inaccurate and unreliably measure the
impact of Sage Grouses Project on PacifiCorps Transmission System. PacifiCorp refused to
take any action. Sage Grouse also stated PacifiCorp would be studying the effects of Sage
Grouses own land on itself, an impossible feet.
Sage Grouse then submitted an informal Notice of Dispute regarding Site Control48 to
PacifiCorp. On October 14, 2014, Sage Grouse and PacifiCorp met via teleconference to discuss
Blue Mountains improper position on the Interconnection Queue. Once again, PacifiCorp
refused to withdraw Blue Mountain BMPPs Interconnection Request as required by FERC
Order 2003 and PacifiCorps OATT, stating that PacifiCorp had already executed an LGIA
with Blue Mountain BMPP based on Blue Mountain BMPPs Interconnection Request and
they considered the issue moot and non-existent.
PacifiCorp has, therefore, violated its OATT in the following ways: (1) By deeming
complete the invalid Blue Mountain BMPP Interconnection Request when it was deficient (2)
By failing to issue Blue Mountain BMPP a Notice of Deficiency and require Blue Mountain
BMPP to post the additional $10,000 where Blue Mountain BMPP did not and could not
reasonably demonstrate Site Control in its Interconnection Request; (3) By failing to deem
withdrawn Blue Mountain BMPPs Interconnection Request, which would result in the loss of
Blue Mountain BMPPs Interconnection Queue Position, despite knowing that Blue Mountain
BMPPs Site Control, as submitted in its Interconnection Request, relied on property rights
48
Page 19 of 116
owned by Sage Grouse and (4) By failing to deem the otherwise, all such deposit(s), additional
and initial, for the Interconnection Request as non-refundable.
PacifiCorps excuse that it has already executed an LGIA with Blue Mountain BMPP is
no defense. Indeed, the Commission should not allow PacifiCorp to turn a blind eye to
Interconnection Requests that rely on land that the Interconnection Customer (like Blue
Mountain BMPP) does not have right to, so that PacifiCorp can thereby lock out other valid
Interconnection Customers (like Sage Grouse) from Open Access to its Transmission System.
That is exactly what PacifiCorp has done to Sage Grouse.
Sage Grouse will first outline the applicable FERC LGIP/OATT provisions and then
detail how PacifiCorp violated its these provisions.
Page 20 of 116
leasehold site for such purpose; or (3) an exclusivity or other business relationship between
Interconnection Customer and the entity having the right to sell, lease or grant Interconnection
Customer the right to possess or occupy a site for such purpose. FERC LGIP page 9 and OATT
page 125.
In addition, [a]n Interconnection Request will not be considered to be a valid request
until all items in [FERC LGIP] Section 3.3.1 and [OATT(IV)(38)(3)(1)] have been received by
the Transmission Provider. If an Interconnection Request fails to meet the requirements set forth
in Section 3.3.1, the Transmission Provider shall notify the Interconnection Customer . . . of the
reasons for such failure and that the Interconnection Request does not constitute a valid request.
FERC LGIP Section 3.3.3. and OATT (IV)(38)(3)(3) In fact, FERC Order 2003 defines an
Interconnection Request as an Interconnection Customers request, in the form of Appendix 1
to the Standard Large Generator Interconnection Procedures, in accordance with the Tariff, to
interconnect a new Generating Facility . . . . FERC LGIP page 6 and OATT (IV)(36)
(Definitions) page 122 Interconnection Request.
Blue Mountain BMPP never submitted an Interconnection Request in accordance with
the Tariff because it could never reasonably demonstrate Site Control. Again, it could not do
so because it had no right to the land and because the development rights to the land were owned
by Sage Grouse. Blue Mountain BMPP, therefore, does not and has never had an
Interconnection Request. In any event, because Blue Mountain BMPPs so-called
Interconnection Request did not reasonably demonstrate the required Site Control, PacifiCorp
must deem withdrawn Blue Mountain BMPPs Interconnection Request resulting in the loss of
its queue position and, thereby, remove Blue Mountain BMPP from the Interconnection Queue.
Page 21 of 116
II.
49
50
Exhibit 30: List of twelve (12) land owners and San Juan County Grantor/Grantee Index for Blue Mountain Power Partners,
LLC (Blue Mountain BMPP) Note: All of the Recording dates are well AFTER the submission for the Interconnection Request.
Page 22 of 116
under contract with REDCO51 or Blue Mountain BMPP52. In fact, the Meyers have notified
PacifiCorp that Blue Mountain has no right to their Property. PacifiCorp has repeatedly ignored
the Meyers notifications in order to accelerate Blue Mountain BMPPs LGIA to execution and
thereby lock out Sage Grouse and other unfavored Interconnection Customers from accessing
Interconnection Capacity on PacifiCorp's Transmission System without a cost prohibitive
System Network Upgrade.
2. Blue Mountain BMPP Does Not Own Developmental Rights to the Other Six (6)
Properties Because (A) Each of these Six Options Expired on Their Terms Prior
to the Filing of the REDCO Bankruptcy; and (B) Blue Mountain BMPPs Claim
to these Properties Is Based on Blue Mountain BMPPs Purchase of Expired
Options from the REDCO Trustee, which Purchase the Bankruptcy Court
Explicitly Limited to Whatever Interest, If Any, the REDCO Trustee May or May
Not Have Held in these PropertiesWhich Was None Because the Options Had
Already Expired.
As explained above, the Meyers land was never subject to any agreement with REDCO
or Blue Mountain BMPP. Because Blue Mountain BMPPs Interconnection Request included on
the Meyers Property, this Interconnection Request was, therefore, invalid and nonexistent.
Although this is enough to show PacifiCorps failure to enforce its OATT, Sage Grouse will now
51
Exhibit 31:REDCO Contract Execution Page devoid of REDCO execution and Letters to PacifiCorp from Bonnie G. Meyer; San
Juan County Recorders Office Grantor/Grantee Abstract for REDCO devoid of any interest recorded by it against any parcels of
land owned by The Meyer Trust
52
Exhibit 30: San Juan County Recorders Office Grantor/Grantee Abstract for Blue Mountain BMPP devoid of any interest
recorded by it against any parcels of land owned by The Meyer Trust.
Page 23 of 116
also show why Blue Mountain BMPP did not have right to six(6) additional Properties that it
improperly claimed in its Interconnection Request.
Eleven (11) of the twelve (12) properties used in Blue Mountains Interconnection
Request were once subject to an Option Lease Agreement with Renewable Energy Development
Corporation (REDCO). These eleven (11) Options Agreements expired on their own terms.
Shortly after all of these Option Agreements had expired, REDCO declared Chapter 7
bankruptcy in the Federal Bankruptcy Court, District of Utah. Shortly after the bankruptcy was
filed, six (6) of these Property owners executed with Sage Grouses predecessor in interest,
Summit Wind Power, LLC, Wind Energy Development Agreements. Summit Wind also signed
the Meyers Property to a similar agreement. This was the first time Trustees, Mr. and Mrs.
Meyer, were signed to a Wind Energy Development Agreement.
This created two (2) problems for PacifiCorp and Blue Mountain BMPP. First, because
of limited Interconnection Capacity, Blue Mountain BMPP had to figure out a way to beat Sage
Grouse to the Interconnection Queue (and displace Ellis-Hall from the Interconnection Queue).
Second, Blue Mountain BMPPs wind studies relied and still rely on data taken from
meteorological wind measuring towers on other land under contract with Sage Grouse (owned by
the Roring family). To overcome these problems, Blue Mountain BMPP had to gain rights to
these Properties, or properties as close as possible to the meteorological wind measuring towers.
For some of these Properties, Blue Mountain BMPP attempted to belatedly execute the expired
Optionseven after the REDCO bankruptcy. This was an inefficacious sham, evidenced by
Blue Mountain BMPPs second strategy: Blue Mountain BMPP also entered into another sham
Page 24 of 116
transaction with the REDCO Trustee to buy the six (and other) expired Options from the
REDCO estate and the Blue Mountain Wind name. 53
Because the validity of the expired options sale was in doubt, the Bankruptcy Court only
permitted the Trustee to operate a sale of the expired options under certain conditions. The
Bankruptcy Court twice ordered that the REDCO Trustee could only sell whatever interest the
estate held in these expired Options, if any, stating that any sale of these expired Options was
AS IS, WHERE IS and IF IS. Furthermore, the Bankruptcy Court explicitly Ordered54 that it
was not going to Quiet Title these properties nor affirmed that the sale transferred any actual
rights. Indeed, the Trustee was selling no rights at all because the Options had long since
expired55. The Trustee knew this, which is why he refused to guarantee title and sold these
expired Options to Blue Mountain BMPP without warranty. Thus, although the REDCO Trustee
was selling nothing more than a shell, Blue Mountain BMPP willingly entered into the sham
transaction to purchase these expired and worthless Options because Blue Mountain BMPP and
PacifiCorp needed something in the public domain to substantiate Blue Mountain BMPPs
purported claim of Site Control as set forth in its Interconnection Request.
53
Exhibit 33: Map of REDCOs Blue Mountain Wind Project Study area. The overall REDCO project was originally
named Blue Mountain Wind and was also known as Blue Mountain. This project's study area initially
encompassed many parcels, including both the current Blue Mountain BMPP and Sage Grouse Projects , and EllisHall Consultants land (which was pulled out of Blue Mountain Wind as the first phase and named Blue Mountain
Wind 1,LLC, the entity that executed the record breaking timely PPA with PacifiCorp. The Meyers land Is excluded
as they had not contract with REDCO.
REDCO was slated to chop the projects up and split them up into multiple 80MW Qualified Facility projects
[(1) Blue Mountain Wind 1 (2) Blue Mountain Wind 2 (3) Blue Mountain Wind 3; all with commercially unviable
Commercial Operation Dates in order to Default or sell all of the QF Projects to PacifiCorp. PacifiCorp would
"Step-In" (as it has with Spanish Fork Wind Park 2, LLC; See Exhibit 34) and take the projects over, thereby
increasing the renewable energy generation portfolio of Pacificorp by upwards of 300 to 1500 MW. The
Commission may wish to be very cautious to differentiate the difference between the old Blue Mountain from
the new Blue Mountain BMPP, which rely on fundamentally different footprints, land rights, Interconnection
Customers, and Interconnection Requests.
54
Exhibit 35: Excerpt from June 20, 2012 Bankruptcy Ruling, Case No. 11-348-145 WTT
55
The REDCO Trustee, George B. Hofmann, IV, Esq., also sold to Blue Mountain BMPP, contracts between the City of Monticello
and Wasatch Wind, of which REDCO wasnt even a party. And Wind Data from wind turbines not even near BMPPs Land and is
publically available.
Page 25 of 116
3. PacifiCorp Knew that Blue Mountain BMPPs Purchase of the Six (6) Expired
Option Leases Was a Sham Transaction.
This transaction was not just a sham because the Option Lease Agreements were expired.
Rather, this transaction was also a sham because Blue Mountain BMPP and PacifiCorp knew all
along that the REDCO Trustee had no rights to sell these expired Options. This is so for three
(3) reasons:
First, in April 201256, Mrs. Meyer, Trustee sent PacifiCorps Large Generation
Interconnection Queue Manager, (Tom Fishback who has recently been "reassigned" to another
position within the Company) a letter stating that there was never a fully executed agreement
between the Meyer Trust and REDCO for any use of their Property. In her letter, Mrs. Meyer,
Trustee also explained that REDCO did not pay any consideration for the proposed Option on
her Property. Mrs. Meyer, Trustee sent this letter because she wanted to ensure that the Trust's
land was not being used for anything by anybody or any entity without her knowledge and
permission, as the Trustee.
Second, Scott Rasmussen, Manager (on behalf of SSP A Trust)57, Stephen and Bonnie
Meyer, Trustees,58 Richard Francom59, Garda Nielson, Trustee60, Clay and Diane Christiansen61,
56
Exhibit12
57
Exhibit 36, Scott Rasmussen Objection filed, Case No. 11-38145 WTT, Document No.115-Objection-Includes Utah Cases with
Utah Supreme Court rulings regarding Lack of Consideration and Contract Invalidity
58
Exhibit 37, Trustees Stephen K. and Bonnie Meyer Objection filed, Case No. 11-38145 WTT, Document No. 110 and 2nd
Objection filed, Case No. 11-38145 WTT, Document No. 141
59
Exhibit 38, Richard D. Francom Objection filed, Case No. 11-38145 WTT, Document No. 128 and Exhibits for Objection filed
Document No. 133, and 2nd Objection filed, Case No. 11-38145 WTT, Document No. 112
60
Exhibit 39, Garda Nielson, Trustee, Objection filed, Case No. 11-38145-WTT, Document No. 107
Page 26 of 116
all objected to the REDCO Trustees proposed sale of the expired Options covering their
Properties on the basis that REDCO never paid the required $1,000.00 Consideration to exercise
the Option, in order for REDCO to execute the terms of the Options to convert them into valid
Lease Agreements, which also required additional monies. All of these Objections were filed
before June18, 2012. PacifiCorp and Blue Mountain BMPPs Principal, Michael Cutbirth, both
knew of these Letters, Objections and Communications because they each made appearances in
the bankruptcy proceeding. These Objections were all received by the REDCO Trustee,
Pacificorp and Michael Cutbirth before June 18, 2012. In addition, Michael Cutbirth received
notice of the failure of the expired Options from his own Private Project Development
Consultant, Ben Kerl on February 7, 201262. In a February 7, 2012 Memorandum to the Board
of Directors of Champlin (the parent company that owned Blue Mountain BMPP), Mr. Kerl
advised the following about the expired REDCO Options & the Project:
1) Risk Factors include:
a. The standing of the leases isnt good.
b. The remaining portion of the project that had not already been sold [January
30, 2012] is being sold with NO WARRANTY, and the Trustee makes no
representations as to completeness of any of the remaining assets.
2) The PPA for this project had been executed with Pacificorp for a levelized rate of
$58.00 and a twenty (20) year contract.
61
Exhibit 40, Clay R. and Diane E. Christiansen Objection filed, Case No. 11-38145 WTT, Document No. 127 and Exhibits for
nd
Objection filed Document No. 134; 2 Objection filed, Case No. 11-38145 WTT, Document No. 113; Supplemental
Memorandum to Objection, filed, Case No. 11-3845 WTT, Document No. 136; and Affidavit of Clay Christiansen, filed Case No.
11-38145 WTT, Document No. 125.
62
Exhibit 41: Ben Kerls February 7, 2012, redacted Memorandum to Champlin, Champlin/GEI Wind Holdings, LLC Board of
Directors, RE: REDCOs Blue Mountain Wind Project, filed as an Exhibit in Oregon District Federal Court, Case No. 3:12-cv00489-AC.
Page 27 of 116
63
Mr. Michael Adams, former Vice-President and Shareholder of REDCO, had parcels of land that were part of the Blue
Mountain Wind 1, LLC, perfected Option Agreements that were sold with the Core Roring Family Leases. His son also had land
included in the Blue Mountain Wind 1, LLC project. Ellis-Hall Consultants, LLC purchased the Core leases for Blue Mountain
Wind 1, LLC from the former REDCO insiders as a new company, Ellis-Hall Consultants purchased these perfected Option
Agreements as well, despite Michaels employment arrangements with Blue Mountain BMPP. Blue Mountain BMPP was trying
to secure those Contracts and the Roring Contracts from Ellis-Hall Consultants, LLC, however Ellis-Hall refused to sell.
64
Exhibit 42: Rich Simon a personal friend of Mr. Cutbirth, he and his wife Denise socialize frequently with Mr. Simon and Mr.
Simon advised Mr. Cutbirth about the pitfalls of the REDCO project and the location of all the wind data being several miles
away evidenced by the emails filed in Case No. 3:12-cv-00489-AC, Documents 13-1,Page 1, 3,5 of 26.
Page 28 of 116
Mountain is currently in default under the terms of the PPA. The PPA has a Purchase
Provision and Step-In Rights for Pacificorp. Although the PPA is not directly part of this
Complaint, the Complainant believes it is imperative that the Commission be made aware of the
unique circumstances and communications between Blue Mountain BMPPs Michael Cutbirth,
his companies, his employees, his contractors and Pacificorp. Pacificorp also received notice of
this Memorandum from Mr. Kerl.
As well, the Memorandum evidences PacifiCorps desire to obtain the project and
increase the rate of the PPA. How often does that ever happen? Never.
The contact indicated that aside from increasing the PPA rate, Pacificorp
would be willing to take action to support the project.
Clearly this is a sham for PacifiCorp to circumvent the Commission and PURPA, secure
a project, and pay itself more than it is offering other Developers, to increase not only its profits,
but drive the competition of other truly independent Interconnection Customers, such as Sage
Grouse out of their way by scooping up any potential projects by any means and any costs. In
the end, its the rate payers that more than pay for this sham. And this isnt the first time
PacifiCorp has done this. Sage Grouse seeks assistance from the Commission to end
PacifiCorps ability to continue with these actions with shill favorable Interconnection
Customers.
This goes to the heart of what this massive conspiracy is about, PacifiCorp expanding
PacifiCorps vertical integration model and maintaining their monopolistic stronghold on its
service area, regardless of what the rules say.
It appears senior citizen farmers and widows from San Juan County are much easier
targets with regard to the expired Option Agreements. Their land is right in the heart of an
Page 29 of 116
Energy Corridor or an Energy Belt from the mid-west up through the Four Corners States,
Utah, Idaho and the Pacific Northwest (PacifiCorps service area).65 were easier targets.
This information relates to the sale of the expired Options. This information too, is
publically available. The Objections filed by the land owners, and all of this other information,
was either publically available or filed in the Bankruptcy where Pacificorp had entered an
appearance in, made filings, and was on the mailing list to receive all filings, including the
Objections, and the purported AS IS, IF IS, No Warranty, language of the sale were also
received before the REDCO Trustee closed on the sale of the expired Options to Blue
Mountain BMPP, which reportedly occurred on or about July 23, 2012.
Third, PacifiCorp and Blue Mountain BMPP had constructive notice of Sage Grouses
interest (and Blue Mountain BMPPs lack of interest) in these properties because Summit Wind
had recorded an interest against many of these properties with the San Juan Countys Recorders
Office, in March 2012.66 Because Utah is a race to record notice jurisdiction state67, Blue
Mountain BMPP and PacifiCorp cannot claim ignorance of Sage Grouses interest in these
properties.
Lastly, the Option Term for ALL the expired Option Agreements expired in October and
November 2014, even if the Consideration had not caused the Options to fail. Blue Mountain
BMPP would have had to send notices, pay significant monies to execute the Lease Provisions, if
it could have exercised the Option which it could not have done.
65
66
Exhibit 46: Grantor/Grantee Abstract list from San Juan County Recorders Office for Summit Wind Power.
67
To date Blue Mountain BMPP has never recorded any lien or notice of Interest asserting any rights to the six (6) expired
Options and the Meyers land. This is in contrast to Blue Mountain BMPPs recorded interest in the other valid five (5)
Properties, which occurred in late 2012. Blue Mountain BMPP did not record a lien against the six (6) expired Options is
evidence that Blue Mountain BMPP is fully aware it has not rights to protect as it knows that it does not have right to these six
(6) Properties. Blue Mountain BMPP knows filing of such an interest would constitute a wrongful lien, a blatant violation of
Utah Law, including but not limited to Utah Title 38, The Wrongful Lien Act.
Page 30 of 116
PacifiCorp and Blue Mountain BMPP therefore knew that Blue Mountain BMPP did not
reasonably demonstrate Site Control in its Interconnection Request because they both actually
and constructively knew that Blue Mountain BMPP did not have a legitimate claim for the
Properties used therein.
4.
All of this information aside, PacifiCorps excuses fail for another reason: Blue Mountain
BMPP twice submitted its Interconnection Request, and PacifiCorp twice deemed complete Blue
Mountain BMPPs Interconnection Requests associated with Interconnection Queue positions
#418 and #426, before Blue Mountain BMPP and the REDCO Trustee even claimed to have
consummated the sham Sale and Purchase of the expired Options.
On or about March 16, 2012, Blue Mountain BMPP submitted an invalid Interconnection
Request to PacifiCorp relying on six (6) perfected Option Agreements originating from the
REDCO bankruptcy that did not belong to Blue Mountain BMPP, but belonged to Ellis-Hall
Consultants, LLC and the twelve (12) expired Option Agreements for the footprint of its project,
inclusive of a Generating Facility and Interconnection Customer Interconnection Facilities.
Seven (7) of the twelve (12) are disputed because they are owned by Sage Grouse. PacifiCorp
assigned to Blue Mountain, Interconnection Queue Position #418. On or about February 17,
2012, the REDCO Trustee and Blue Mountain BMPP entered into a sale of the expired
Options but needed the bankruptcy court to approve the sale. On March 22, 2012, PacifiCorp
deemed complete Blue Mountain BMPPs Interconnection Request. Only later that same day,
the Bankruptcy Court issued an order allowing the REDCO Trustee to sell whatever, if any,
Page 31 of 116
interest the REDCO Estate might have had in the twelve (12) expired Option Agreements, if any,
with no warranty, but only As Is, Where Is, If Is. The REDCO Trustee and Blue Mountain
BMPP, however, never closed on this sale, presumably because the legitimacy of these expired
Option Agreements was in question, and Blue Mountain BMPP conceded that the validity of the
expired Options was a problem. The fact is the six (6) other perfected Option Agreements, for
the Roring Family, belonged another developer, Ellis-Hall, not Blue Mountain BMPP, and those
leases were also included in the Interconnection Request for Queue Position No. 418.
On or about March 26, 2012, it appears Blue Mountain BMPP voluntarily withdrew its
Interconnection Request. PacifiCorp then terminated Blue Mountain BMPPs Interconnection
Queue Position #418. On June 26, 2012, PacifiCorp assigned Blue Mountain BMPP a new
Interconnection Queue Position #426. The REDCO Trustee and Blue Mountain BMPP,
however, still had not closed on the sham sale of the expired Option Agreements. On June 20,
2012, the Bankruptcy Court conducted another hearing regarding the expired Option Agreements
and held that the Court was specifically not Quieting Title of the expired Option Agreements,
but merely permitting the Trustee to only sell whatever interest hes got if any that the REDCO
Estate held in those expired Option Agreements, if anything. This sham transaction did not close
until July 23, 2012long after PacifiCorp had issued Blue Mountain BMPP its second
Interconnection Queue Position of No. 426 and deemed complete Blue Mountain BMPP's second
Interconnection Request, which again included some of Sage Grouses parcels of land.68
68
Blue Mountain BMPP did not surreptitiously acquire an Interconnection Queue on faulty Site Control alone. Rather,
PacifiCorp worked with Blue Mountain BMPP to deem complete Interconnection Requests that accepted Blue Mountain
BMPPs Interconnection Request the moment the REDCO Trustee provided Blue Mountain BMPP copies of the twelve (12)
expired Option Agreements and filed his Motion to Sell; whereby the Court permitted the sale of the Expired Options,
because there were no warranties or guarantees being given. This is evidenced from the fact that PacifiCorp deemed complete
an Interconnection Request once assigning an Interconnection Queue position to Blue Mountain BMPP before the Court
allowed the sale of the expired Option Agreements to continue. Realizing that Blue Mountain BMPP could not possibly
demonstrate Site Control before the court issued its Order, Blue Mountain BMPP withdrew its Interconnection Request and
Pacificorp terminated the Interconnection Queue Position and continued to collaborate with Blue Mountain BMPP to
Page 32 of 116
5. Regardless of What PacifiCorp Knew in the Past, PacifiCorp Continues to Violate its
OATT by Failing to Withdraw Blue Mountain BMPPs Interconnection Request
Where Sage Grouse Has Repeatedly Told PacifiCorp that Blue Mountain BMPP Does
Not and Will Never Have Site Control as Stated in Blue Mountain BMPPs
Interconnection Request Because the Developmental Rights to these Properties Are
Owned by Sage Grouse.
As explained above, Blue Mountain BMPPs Interconnection Request is not valid and
should be non-existent because it does not reasonably demonstrate Site Control and comply with
the FERC LGIP and OATT definition of Interconnection Request.
OATT (IV)(38)(3)(3) Thus, it was not in accordance with the OATT. Blue Mountain BMPPs
submission for an Interconnection Request cannot constitute an Interconnection Request under
FERC Order 2003. FERC LGIA page 6 (an Interconnection Customers request, in the form of
Appendix 1 to the Standard Large Generator Interconnection Procedures, in accordance with
the Tariff, to interconnect a new Generating Facility . . . .). Due to its Site Control deficiency,
PacifiCorp should have withdrawn Blue Mountain BMPPs Interconnection Request, thereby
resulting in the loss (termination) of Blue Mountain BMPPs Interconnection Queue Position.
resubmit its Interconnection Request after the Bankruptcy Court approved the Trustees Sale Motion was completed. This
process, which resulted in a new Queue Position Assignment of #0426 with essentially the same Interconnection Request as
that (minus the Roring Family Agreements) was submitted, accepted and assigned a Queue Position of #0426.
Page 33 of 116
Indeed, PacifiCorp should also deem withdrawn Blue Mountain BMPPs Interconnection
Request because Blue Mountain BMPP did not adhere to all requirement of [the] LGIP. FERC
LGIP 3.6 and OATT (IV)(38)(3)(6) ([I]f the Interconnection Customer fails to adhere to all
requirements of this LGIP . . . the Transmission Provider shall deem the Interconnection Request
to be withdrawn and shall provide written notice to the Interconnection Customer of the deemed
withdrawal and an explanation of the reasons for such deemed withdrawal . . . . Withdrawal
shall result in the loss of the Interconnection Customers Queue Position.
Sage Grouse has made several attempts to resolve PacifiCorps improper conduct in light
of Blue Mountain BMPPs deficient Site Control. PacifiCorp is railroading Sage Grouse, forcing
Sage Grouse through the LGIP in order to assess significant Network Upgrades thereby killing
the Sage Grouse project in hopes that Sage Grouse will go away to where she came from.
PacifiCorp has refused to address Sage Grouses concerns informally, resulting in Sage Grouse
filing an informal Notice of Dispute with PacifiCorp, stating that PacifiCorp must comply with
its OATT and fairly administer it equally to all Interconnection Customers. The withdrawal of
Blue Mountain BMPPs Interconnection Request and loss of Blue Mountain BMPP from the
Interconnection Queue because PacifiCorp improperly deemed complete Blue Mountain
BMPPs speculative, deficient, and unreasonable demonstration of Site Control. After
PacifiCorp accepted Sage Grouses informal Notice of Dispute, the parties met via
teleconference on October 14, 2014. Sage Grouse explained to PacifiCorp its concerns, as set
forth above. In response, PacifiCorp made multiple false excuses for its failure to enforce its
OATT.
First, PacifiCorp untruthfully said that it was not previously aware of Sage Grouses
claim to the properties set forth in Blue Mountain BMPPs Interconnection Request. As
Page 34 of 116
explained above, this is false because multiple landowners submitted letters to Tom Fishback,
Pacificorps Large Generation Interconnection Agreement Queue Manager. The letters were
sent both before and after PacifiCorp issued an Interconnection Queue Positions to Blue
Mountain BMPP. These landowners objected to their Properties being included in the REDCO
Trustees sale because the underlying Options were expired.
Furthermore, PacifiCorp was on constructive notice that there was a problem with these
Properties due to Sage Grouses recorded interests in Properties, as recorded in San Juan County.
PacifiCorp had no response to this argument.
Second, PacifiCorp stated that it does not have to vet an Interconnection Customers
claim to Site Control but that it can take the Interconnection Customers request at face value.
This is not a correct application of FERC Order 2003, and Good Utility Practices 69 and 70. Under
the LGIP, an Interconnection Request must include documentation reasonably demonstrating
one (1) of three Site Control provisions. FERC LGIP 3.3.1 and OATT (IV)(38)(3)(1) Thus,
PacifiCorp cannot take a claim of Site Control at face value, but instead, must evaluate the
documentation and weigh whether or not it is a reasonable demonstration. Without this
evaluation, the regulatory provision is rendered useless. This is particularly the case where the
Commission has ordered and PacifiCorps OATT requires an Interconnection Customer to post
an additional deposit of $10,000 to process the Interconnection Request without Site Control,
and be prepared to forfeit that and the initial deposit if they fail to secure Site Control. This is
specifically to deter these types of circumstances and speculative Requests retaining valuable
69
Exhibit 18.
70
Good Utility Practice requires Pacificorp to verify the demonstration of Site Control. There is no other mechanism for
verifying Site Control for the Interconnection Requests that Transmission Provider PacifiCorp receives. PacifiCorp infers it is the
responsibility of the Commission, however, and that is simply not reasonable because the Commission oversees the regulation
PacifiCorps actions and handling of Interconnection Requests, not the Interconnect Requests itself. PacifiCorp is the
Transmission Provider that actually receives these requests. It is ridiculous to suggest (as PacifiCorp has to Sage Grouse) that is
in fact the Commissions duty to review the Site Control provisions.
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Interconnection Capacity. As is the present situation. PacifiCorp has admitted that it did not
follow this provision with Blue Mountain BMPP. And, even if PacifiCorp could accept Blue
Mountain BMPP's sham Site Control documents at face value, it cannot do so in the face of
PacifiCorps actual and constructive notice of Sage Grouses interest in the Properties. The
face value provides absolutely no demonstration of development rights in order to construct
necessary facilities and it is a minor effect for PacifiCorp to contact the Interconnection
Customer and request that the Interconnection Customer do the running around as stated by
PacifiCorp, and provide the necessary documentation to establish Sight Control (as Sage Grouse
was required to do).
In effect, PacifiCorps position is that it holds carte blanche authority to push and
leapfrog invalid and speculative projects forward, as it sees fit, especially if PacifiCorps purpose
is to eventually take these projects over71, as is the case with Blue Mountain BMPP. PacifiCorps
ability to control the Interconnection Queue demonstrates that PacifiCorp, at its discretion, can
use these invalid projects to block valid projects, such as Sage Grouse, from open access to
PacifiCorps Transmission System. This completely undermines the purpose and policy behind
various Commission Orders and its regulatory authority.
There is understandably much at stake for PacifiCorp. And, because PacifiCorp has
blundered the application of FERC LGIP and its OATT in order to circumvent the Commissions
authority, Sage Grouse has reason to believe that PacifiCorp is now breaking the law to cover its
tracks. In fact, PacifiCorp is now instructing Blue Mountain BMPP to get Sage Grouses
Properties under contract at all cost. PacifiCorp is also attempting to get around Blue
Mountain BMPPs lack of Site Control by re-characterizing alleged material modifications to the
71
Exhibit 47: November 30, 2011, Pacificorp asks regulators to approve 79.8 MW wind power agreement north of
Monticello published in the San Juan Record in Monticello, San Juan County, Utah.
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III.
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Sage Grouse has made Blue Mountain BMPPs lack of Site Control the focus of this
Complaint because of the direct consequences PacifiCorps impropriety has and will continue to
have on Sage Grouses Project. This is not the extent of PacifiCorps concerning and potentially
illegal conduct. Sage Grouse also requests that the Commission further investigate, or refer to
the appropriate agencies the following:
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projects, including the Latigo Wind Park, LLC (Latigo) (Interconnection Queue
No. 0384).
For example, Ellis-Hall Consultants72 ("Ellis-Hall") is between Latigo and Blue
Mountain BMPP on the Interconnection Queue at Position No. 0420. In order to lock
Ellis-Hall out of access to PacifiCorps Transmission Capacity out of Pinto
Substation on the Transmission Queue, PacifiCorp Transmission Services reserved
and allocated the remaining Transmission Capacity of 140 MW (Latigo 60 MW and
Blue Mountain 80 MW) to its generation division, PacifiCorp Energy before
PacifiCorp Energy, the Transmission Customer, had even secured, much less
executed the PPA, or received the required Public Service Commission approval for a
PPA from either entity.
In addition, PacifiCorp had designated the Blue Mountain Wind 1, project (the
Roring Leases once under contract with PacifiCorp) as a Network Resource
immediately after executing its PPA. Ellis-Hall purchased ALL of the leases for this
project and is currently working through this maze of schemes from PacifiCorp to
construct the wind farm. In an attempt to displace Ellis-Hall, PacifiCorp then
designated Latigo as a Network Resource, once again well before securing a PPA.
This was clearly because Ellis-Hall had purchased the Option Agreements for the
project Blue Mountain Wind 1, LLC the 80MW project PacifiCorp had designated as
the Network Resource project from that area and has since converted the Options to
72
Ellis-Hall Consultants, LLC is a particularly strong threat to reducing the monopolistic influences PacifiCorp
commands in the West and Northwest because the largest principal of Ellis-Hall, has a proven track record of
having designed, created, built, operated and maintained a wind farm from scratch. Not a flipper not a shill
developer front. A renowned expert in the international field of renewable energy development and grid
management, PacifiCorp is well aware that with this expertise, their vertical integration expansion opportunities
will be greatly affected if this entity is able to gain the open access the Commission and Congress are seeking to
have in order to eliminate the very monopolistic characteristics and undertones, PacifiCorp seeks to preserve.
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Lease Agreements. During this time, Sage Grouse secured rights to the Roring land
through Ellis-Hall and the Roring Family.
When PacifiCorp failed to secure the Option rights, or the rights to control the
project from Ellis-Hall, PacifiCorp embarked in a scheme to keep Ellis-Hall (and its
Blue Mountain Wind 1 Lease Agreements) from successfully securing a PPA. This
in effect kills Sage Grouse because Sage Grouse is connecting into the Ellis-Hall
Collector/Connector substation.
As well, PacifiCorp permitted both Latigo and Blue Mountain to enter into PPAs
without an LGIA, despite having issued each of the Projects multiple letters stating
the opposite, that they would be required to execute an LGIA.
PacifiCorps actions allowed Blue Mountain to leapfrog ahead of Ellis-Hall on
the Pacificorp's Transmission Queue despite being behind Ellis-Hall on the
Interconnection Queue73. In contrast, PacifiCorp required Ellis-Hall to first obtain a
fully executed LGIA before Pacificorp would execute a PPA. Despite this not being
the common practice of PacifiCorp, as in the last ten (10) years PacifiCorp has never
required that an Interconnection Agreement be in place before executing a PPA,
PacifiCorp implemented this requirement exclusively for Ellis-Hall and only EllisHall. In fact, since Ellis-Hall notified PacifiCorp it has executed LGIA, PacifiCorp
has execute five (5) PPAs whereby the QF Owner did note secure an LGIA first. Of
these five (5) PPAs not one has since secured its LGIA, and Ellis=Hall continues to
wait for PacifiCorp. Ellis-Hall is the only QF Owner, whereby PacifiCorp has
73
This is how PacifiCorp is able to effectively control open access to its Transmission System. By controlling the processing of
the Interconnection Requests, PacifiCorp is able to control the access to Interconnection. If that fails, then they can circumvent
the Interconnection Process by reserving and manipulating the Transmission Capacity Queue and stopping projects it views as
unfavorable from being able to move their power out of the Point of Interconnection Substations.
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required a fully executed LGIA before executing a PPA. Despite this requirement
being fulfilled by Ellis-Hall, PacifiCorp still has refused to execute a PPA with EllisHall. PacifiCorps continued refusal to execute a PPA with Ellis-Hall affects Sage
Grouse, since Ellis-Halls substation is Sage Grouses point of interconnection.
PacifiCorps actions are not by accident. At one point, when PacifiCorp thought
it would be able to displace Ellis-Hall it follow Good Utility Practices, and advised its
favored Interconnection Customer, Blue Mountain BMPP that since its collector
substation was merely 2.35 miles away from Ellis-Halls.
a sham as well. After FERC issued its December 16, 2013 ruling, and PacifiCorp
realized it would not be able to use the Transmission Capacity to block Ellis-Hall,
PacifiCorp allowed Blue Mountain BMPP permission to construct its own
collector/connector substation, (which it initially had located on Sage Grouse lands
under the power line with an impedance of Zero). Aside from the other concerns, one
of which PacifiCorp required Ellis-Hall to build into its substation the necessary
facilities to accommodate Blue Mountain BMPP, the rate payers will not be expected
to pay to maintain two (2) substations less three miles apart. Both Ellis-Hall and Sage
Grouse have a principal who is a visible minority. And both are experiencing
disastrous circumstances in dealing with Pacificorp.
As with the Interconnection Agreement requirement for the PPA likewise, the
same standard of elevation is being applied to Sage Grouse, as is evidenced by its
Interconnection Processing. In fact, the only Interconnection Customers/QF Owners
being forced to secure fully executed LGIAs are the Interconnection Customers/QF
Owners, whereby a principal is visible minority. In this case a black woman.
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2. Blue Mountain Relies on Wind Data Taken From Another Projects Land:
PacifiCorp has also permitted Blue Mountain BMPP to use wind data for
determinative "individual project characteristics" that was NOT produced on Blue
Mountains land. Blue Mountains project fails to follow Good Utility Practices and
is, therefore, at best, highly speculative. PacifiCorp knows this but has failed to do
anything about it, likely because such is not concerning in the scheme of PacifiCorp
Stepping In and taking over the Project. For example, on multiple occasions in 2012,
2013 and 2014, Ms. Corinne Nielson Roring, sent letters to PacifiCorps collectively
stating that wind data results were being poached from meteorological wind towers
on her Property and that Blue Mountain BMPP was misappropriating that data as its
own. PacifiCorp ignored her letters and continued on through the various processes.
Other instances of this type of misrepresentation are present with Blue Mountain
BMPP.
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5. Utahs Public Service Commission: On July 9, 2013, the State of Utah Public
Service Commission ("PSC") opened a Docket No. 13-035-115 for the Matter of
Pacificorp seeking the approval of a Power Purchase Agreement between Pacificorp
and Blue Mountain BMPP. A matter brought before was the issue of Blue Mountain
BMPP's deficient Site Control under Part II. Process For Negotiating Interconnection
Agreements ("Part II") of the Rocky Mountain Power Electrical Service Schedule No.
38, P.S.C.U. 49 ("Schedule 38"). The PSC Hearing Officer expressed "...There's a
process for that, whether it's through FERC on the Open Access Transmission
Tariff site or in Schedule 38." and refused to address the matter of Site Control. Sage
Grouse had concerns about representations Blue Mountain made regarding the land in
their QF Project as well. The Hearing Officer issued this ruling, despite the PSC
having exercised jurisdiction over the language of Part IV. Large Generation
Interconnection Agreements of the Pacificorp Open Access Transmission Tariff,
FERC Electrical Tariff, Volume No. 11 ("Section IV of OATT") and its incorporation
into Schedule 38 (the Tariff that governs PPAs) for the purposes of defining the
required Interconnection Procedures for the inclusion in Part II of Schedule 38 in PSC
Dockets No. 02-035-T11and 05-035-T16. The PSC refused to address the matter of
Site Control for Schedule 38 stating that it fell under FERC jurisdiction, and any
issues of Site Control under OATT belong to FERC. That would be the case if the
issue of Blue Mountain BMPP's Site Control was exclusively for its Interconnection
Request, an instrument of the OATT. However, Blue Mountain BMPP used Sage
Grouse lands in its Request for Indicative Pricing Proposal an instrument of Schedule
38, and its PPA also an instrument of Schedule 38. Schedule 38 is a Pacificorp
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Tariff, whereby the PSC governs its application. Since the Hearing Officer refused to
address the Site Control matter, and ruled it was a FERC matter, the issue of Blue
Mountain BMPP was (and continues) using Sage Grouse's parcels for its Request for
Indicative Pricing and for its PPA becomes paramount. Paul Clements, of PacifiCorp
testified that PacifiCorp (not a Court of general jurisdiction) determined that the Blue
Mountain BMPP Options were valid. That was the basis for the PPA executions and
the PPA Applications sailed through the approval process, despite objections on the
basis of Site Control. The PSC stated that Site Control is a FERC matter and not
something for the Public Service Commission to decide. 74 This is problematic,
because the application of Section IV of the OATT in terms of its incorporation as the
governing authority of Part II of Schedule 38 seems to fall into a loophole of
jurisdictional authority, at least in the PSCs view.
74
Reporters Transcript, Confidential Proceedings for the Hearing on September 9, 2013, page 235, lines 23-25 and page 236,
lines 1-6.
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land, both of which Blue Mountain BMPP is actively seeking to sell, and has in fact
partnered with Greenbriar Capital Corporation, an entity traded on the Toronto
Venture Stock Exchange, actively seeking investors. The effects of Pacificorp's
actions are long reaching.
In the same matter, Pacificorp's Paul Clements, Senior Power Marketer and
Originator responsible for negotiating and Qualifying Facility Contracts was
questioned by the Intervener's Counsel about the Site Control of Blue Mountain's
project and testified the following:
Q. (Counsel): "Yeah. I'll just say it appears you didn't do much due diligence on
this, did you?"
A. (Clements): "That is not correct. And it was actually--I made that statement in
the previous hearing on this docket, and let me explain why. We [Pacificorp] were
approached by your client with concerns about the legitimacy of the lease associated
with the Blue Mountain property. We were also aware of the situation that was
occurring with the REDCO Bankruptcy and the leases that were purchased by Blue
Mountain out of the REDCO Bankruptcy. We were a parties to the REDCO
Bankruptcy because we had an executed PPA with REDCO. And so we were
following that proceeding very closely because, as you know, we cannot terminate a
PPA while in bankruptcy. So we were following that very carefully.
Since your client brought to our attention concerns that they owned the Blue
Mountain land leases, we felt it was appropriate to do additional due diligence
on the issue of the land leases for Blue Mountain. We engaged outside counsel.
We used our own in-house counsel. And we determined that the land leases that
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are included in this power purchase agreement are valid. And that was the extent
of our due diligence on that issue."
The lands used in the Blue Mountain PPA include the Sage Grouse parcels of land
as evidenced by Mr. Clements testimony and emails. Pacificorp continues to cloak its
activities behind "confidentiality provisions" not intended for the purposes of
protecting such trickery.
In passing FERC Order 2003, FERC ordered that utilities, such as PacifiCorp,
are not to abuse security requirements in an effort to withhold from public disclosure
commercial information that lacks legitimate CEII status. FERC Order 2003 84. Blue
Mountains Site Control documents do not have a legitimate CEII status, particularly in
light of the fact that Blue Mountains Site Control and related documents are publicly
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available in San Juan County Recorders Office, the San Juan County Assessor's Office,
the San Juan County Building Permit Department, and the Federal Court in Oregon.
Even if PacifiCorps conduct was proper, and it was not, and continues to not be,
the Commission should ensure that the proverbial fox [PacifiCorp] is not guarding the
hen house. Indeed, PacifiCorp has every motivation to deem information confidential
if that information would demonstrate that PacifiCorp is not complying with regulatory
authority and breaking its OATT and/or the law.
In order to remedy these problems, the Commission may wish to allow PacifiCorps
current Interconnection Capacity be made readily available and attainable before an
Interconnection Customer and QF Owner is required to submit an Interconnection Request
to ascertain this information. This being suggested, it still does not negate PacifiCorps
obligation to comply with the OATT and properly vet Interconnection Requests, including
but not limited to the demonstration of Site Control and the entities obligation to comply
with the OATT and its fair and equal application.
Orders, Federal Law, State Law, its own OATT, Schedule 38 and a barrage of
other tariffs, statutes, and governing requirements. It is further difficult, if not
impossible, for an Interconnection Customer to determine whether or not
another Interconnection Customer is violating the property rights of an entity,
individual, Interconnection Customer, or the likeas Blue Mountain BMPP
has done and continues to do with Sage Grouse. This entire process is based
upon regulatory agencies and such relying on PacifiCorp to police itself,
follow the rules, and comply with regulatory orders. This just isn't possible.
Indeed, the fox (PacifiCorp) is guarding the henhouse.
Here is yet another example of PacifiCorp's engaging in trickery in order
to cloak its activities and facility an outcome favorable to its objectives:
In a Complaint brought before the State of Utah Public Service
Commission Docket No. 13-035-22, In the Matter of the Formal Complaint of
Ros Vrba for Energy of Utah against Rocky Mountain Power, the
Complainant first filed an Informal Complaint with the State of Utah Division
of Public Utilities ("Division"). In the February 14, 2013 Response Letter75
from Bruce Griswold, Director of PacifiCorp Energy, and superior to Paul
Clements, clearly and unequivocally stated to the Division the following:
"Schedule 38 clearly grants Pacificorp the authority to condition
purchases from a QF on the prior execution of the necessary
interconnection arrangements."
In its response to Complainant, based up Pacificorp's representations in its
Response Letter, the Division issued an unfavorable recommendation of Denial
75
Exhibit 48: February 14, 2013 Letter to Artie Powell of the State of Utah Division of Public Utilities from PacifiCorps Bruce
Griswold in Docket No. 13-035-22.
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to the PSC whereby the Division76 acknowledges its reliance on the information
provided by Pacificorp when the Division exercised a recommendation to the
PSC.
"In responding to the issues raised in Mr. Vrbas complaints, the
Division is relying on the information provided in the complaints, the
Companys [Pacificorp's] response to the informal complaint, as well
as the Divisions understanding of Schedule 38, Commission rules and
orders, and the purpose of avoided costs."
PacifiCorp's assertion that "Schedule 3877 clearly grants Pacificorp the authority
to condition purchases from a QF on the prior execution of the necessary
interconnection arrangements." is simply not true. Schedule 38 does not "clearly
grant PacifiCorp the authority to condition purchases from a QF on the prior
execution of the necessary interconnection arrangements". PacifiCorp provides no
citation for where Schedule 38 states "...on the prior execution..." because no such
citation exists. As such, this example, alone, serves as a clear example that
PacifiCorp is actively engaged in actions of trickery that subject an Interconnection
Customer/QF Owner to prejudice or disadvantage and that Pacificorp cannot be left
to police itself and its activities. PacifiCorp's subtle trickery to present information
to a government agency, the Division, with full knowledge the PSC would be relying
on the recommendation of the Division as it typically does should not be allowed.
What is absolutely clear, is, the lengths and methods PacifiCorp will employ to
secure favorable outcome (such as the Denial) for itself and any party(s) it deems
76
Exhibit 49:March 25, 2013, State of Utah, Division of Public Utilities, Action Request Response, Docket No. 13-035-22
77
Exhibit 50: P.S.C.U. 50, The Rocky Mountain Power Electrical Service Tariff No. 38 (appears to have no change from P.S.C.U. 49)
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78
Exhibit 51: In this Docket No.13-035-22, Energy of Utah filed a Complaint, because PacifiCorp refused to execute
two (2) PPAs with Energy of Utah for two (2) QF projects. The correspondence is very clear, regarding the
reasoning and why it makes Good Utility Sense to require an executed Interconnection Agreement before
PacifiCorp executes a PPA. This matter was to come before the Utah Public Service Commission on April 22, 2013.
One can reasonable conclude from the documentation that the likelihood that the PSC was probably going to
agree with the comments of the Utah Division of Public Utilities appeared to be quite strong. It is very clear that
PacifiCorps position was absolute: QFs MUST HAVE A FULLY EXECUTED INTERCONNECTION AGREEMENT PRIOR
TO execution of a PPA. The hearing was scheduled for April 22, 2013. On April 15, 2013, PacifiCorp received a
hand delivered request for Indicative Pricing from Ellis-Hall Consultants. Ellis-Hall Consultants was merely a few
weeks away from securing its Interconnection Agreement. Somehow the invisible firewall between PacifiCorp
Transmission Services and PacifiCorp Merchant Function burned down because all of a sudden at the last
minute, after fighting so hard to ensure that this interpretation of Schedule 38 becomes the new policy
PacifiCorp contacted Energy of Utah, and allowed him, along with Favored Interconnection Customer/QF Owners
Blue Mountain BMPP and Latigo to ALL execute their PPAs (without an Interconnection Agreement) and PacifiCorp
submitted for approval, all of the PPAs (while still requiring Ellis-Hall to secure a fully executed PPA). So PacifiCorp
brought four (4) applications to the PSC for approval, on July 9, 2013 that were all wind PPAs executed without
LGIAs. A review of the material submitted in Docket No. 13-035-22 is very clear what the Division of Public
Utilities Position is, what PacifiCorps position was (prior to the Ellis-Hall Indicative Pricing request) and the reasons
PacifiCorp settled and allowed Energy of Utah to execute two (2) QF PPAs it had fought to keep them from having.
Simple. PacifiCorp wanted Energy of Utah to drop the Complaint (which it did) so that the Utah PSC would not
issue a ruling requiring an LGIA before the execution of a PPA. That cleared the way for PacifiCorp to leapfrog both
Blue Mountain BMPP and Latigo ahead of Ellis-Hall by PacifiCorp securing their PPAs and then blocking out EllisHall on the Transmission Queue because although PacifiCorp had ALREADY reserved the Transmission Capacity
well before they are allowed to as a Transmission Customer under FERC LGIP and OATT rules, now they had the
PPAs to facilitate moving to the next step of PacifiCorps planned defaults and buy out schemes to secure these
two (2) projects, thereby owning the renewable energy generation facility in the only area suitable in Utah, San
Juan County, at Pinto Substation, where PacifiCorp can continue with its vertical integration expansion model and
block out the only real competitor has Ellis-Hall. PacifiCorp was moving forward with that scheme, and delaying
Ellis-Halls approval of its LGIA and yet and still refusing to execute the PPA with Ellis-Hall. Then the Commission
issued the December 16, 2013 ruling in Docket No. EL 14-1-000. That spoiled PacifiCorps leapfrog Transmission
Scheme to displace Ellis-Hall, so then PacifiCorp immediately re-issued the Ellis-Hall Indicative Pricing Proposal, by
reducing it to cover the Transmission costs PacifiCorp will now have to bear resulting from the Commission Order.
That is what PacifiCorp has done, with Indicative Pricing Proposals. It is reducing them so significantly that it
basically nullifies the effects of the Commissions Order. As well, the pricings are so low, the projects are no longer
viable, unless a project works a deal out to be a shill for PacifiCorp and agrees to allow it to take over its project by
various methods. In addition, to date, PacifiCorp still hasnt executed a PPA with Ellis-Hall. And that is how
PacifiCorp is embarking in yet more schemes to kill the Ellis-Hall project, thereby killing the Sage Grouse project.
Sage Grouse seeks to request the Commission review this circumstance and make a determination regarding
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PacifiCorps conduct in this case, for if PacifiCorp is successful in quashing Ellis-Halls project, the PacifiCorp has
effectively quashed Sage Grouses project. Sage Grouse asks that the Commission review the documentation that
identifies PacifiCorps desire to secure the Blue Mountain Wind 1, Project, because that is the foot print of the
Option Agreements Ellis-Hall has purchased and PacifiCorp did everything to fast track the requirements of the
Project when Pacificorp believed that it was going own the project until it because clear that Ellis-Hall was not
going to sell the Roring Leases back to Pacificorp, nor allow PacifiCorp to Step-In and purchase the project and in
fact that Ellis-Hall had negotiate and allowed Sage Grouse to come through its substation. It is not known which
entity is PacifiCorps primary target, yet it is clear at some point PacifiCorp views both Projects as a threat to its
vertical integration expansion monopoly model. As well since the July 9,2013 requests for PPA approval, PacifiCorp
has executed and request approval of at least 4 other projects, without Interconnection Agreements.
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See Exhibit 43: Commission Order, December 16, 2013, Docket No. EL 14-1-000
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Control, PacifiCorp continues to restudy land it has studied for three (3)
owners, and charge for it. And assess Network Upgrades to access it.
of Network Upgrade Charges necessary to access Interconnection Capacity. But Sage Grouses
studies cannot be completed with reliability or accuracy. In addition, as it currently stands,
PacifiCorp will lock Sage Grouse out of open access to its Transmission System Interconnection
Access because PacifiCorp has reserved for Blue Mountain BMPP the remaining Interconnection
Capacity available without substantial network system upgrades. PacifiCorp conveniently
maintains there is no more Interconnection Capacity after Blue Mountain BMPP, which very
well may be true. However, Sage Grouse followed the rules, and complied with all the extra
hurdles placed in front of it. PacifiCorp is also refusing to acknowledge Sage Grouses project
as a QF because it is within one mile of a higher queued positioned QF, of course, Blue
Mountain BMPP has included Sage Grouses land in its Interconnection Request, and now
PacifiCorp is using that invalid inclusion as determinative means to force not only
Interconnection Capacity System Network Upgrades on Sage Grouse, but also force Sage Grouse
to bear the Transmission Capacity System Network Upgrades PacifiCorp would be required to
bear as the Transmission Customer, pursuant to the Commissions December 16, 2013 Order in
Docket No. EL-14-1-000. PacifiCorp is then able to kill two (2) birds with one stone
regarding the Commissions Order. PacifiCorp is able to circumvent the true intention and spirit
of the Commissions Order. PacifiCorp uses the Commissions Order as a sword to yet again,
deny open access to its Transmission System, while maintaining the appearance of regulatory
compliance. In the end, PacifiCorps conduct has risked the viability of Sage Grouses Project.
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(5) INDICATE THE PRACTICAL, OPERATIONAL OR OTHER NONFINANCIAL IMPACTS IMPOSED AS A RESULT OF THE ACTION
OR INACTION, INCLUDING WHERE APPLICABLE, THE
ENVIRONMENTAL, SAFETY OR RELIABILITY IMPACTS OF
THE ACTION OR INACTION.
PacifiCorps failure to comply with FERC ORDER 2003 and enforce its OATT
significantly impacts Sage Grouses project, all other valid Interconnection Customers and the
end user consumer who pay higher prices as a result of all of PacifiCorps trickery. PacifiCorps
conduct does not only harms Sage Grouse, however, but also undermines the policies underlying
the Energy Power Act and FERC Order 2003 and public policy in general.
As explained above, PacifiCorp failed to require Blue Mountain BMPP to reasonably
demonstrate Site Control for its Generating Facility in its Interconnection Request. PacifiCorp
has always known that Blue Mountain BMPP could not demonstrate Site Control. PacifiCorps
failure to enforce its OATT has thereby reserved and allocated Interconnection Capacity based
on a speculative Interconnection Request. In fact, Blue Mountain BMPPs project is not even
speculative. It is impossible. Blue Mountain BMPP cannot and will not build its project as set
forth in its Interconnection Request for #0426 because Sage Grouse owns the developmental
rights to the land and therefore has the Site Control necessary to construct the Generating
Facility and is not authorizing Blue Mountain to use the land.
The practical and operational impacts on Sage Grouse are significant. For example,
PacifiCorp is aiding and abetting Blue Mountain BMPPs interference with Sage Grouses
developmental rights and those landowners concurrent property rights. Most importantly,
however, is that PacifiCorp, based on Blue Mountain BMPPs impossible Interconnection
Request, is allocating its remaining Interconnection Capacity to Blue Mountain BMPP. Thus, as
things currently stand, PacifiCorp will require Sage Grouse to bare the network upgrade costs to
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interconnection to PacifiCorps Transmission System. This will effectively kill Sage Grouses
project, Pacificorp's objective.
The impact of PacifiCorps conduct, however, extends far beyond Sage Grouse. In fact,
PacifiCorp also is undermining the policy against monopoly (rate payer rates) and reliability.
Pursuant to its OATT, Pacificorp is required to reliably approximate and assign the cost
responsibility for the Interconnection Costs Sage Grouse will be required to bear with the
commencement of the LGIP Study Process in October 2014. Section 41.2 of OATT also
requires that the Scope of Interconnection Feasibility Study "consider all generating
facilitiesthat have a pending higher queued Interconnection Request to interconnect to the
Transmission Systemon the date the Interconnection Feasibility Study is commenced.
Pacificorp has allowed Blue Mountain BMPP and its invalid Interconnection Request to remain
on the LGIA Queue and maintain its higher Queued Position. Pacificorp has already studied
Blue Mountain BMPPs invalid Interconnection Request, using land that is the subject of not
only the lack of Site Control for Blue Mountain BMPPs invalid Interconnection Request, but is
also the land that unmistakably belongs to Sage Grouse and submitted in its Interconnection
Request. Sage Grouse remains on the Queue in a lower position, subordinate to a project that is
unlawfully using its land and being forced to "pay for again" studies Pacificorp has already
performed on the impact of a Generating Facility (on the land). Pacificorp has insured that any
studies on the Sage Grouse Project indicating needed upgrades are required will be inaccurate
since Sage Grouse's land cannot be used by Blue Mountain BMPP, yet Pacificorp has reserved
and allocated 80 MW of valuable Interconnection Capacity to Blue Mountain BMPP, based on
the Generating Facility, inclusive of Sage Grouses land, Blue Mountain BMPP originally
submitted. Any change to Blue Mountain BMPPs land footprint would be material and render
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those studies inaccurate in any case and require a restudy to correct. No such restudy has been
done. This will render any studies done on the Sage Grouse project to contain unnecessary
upgrades that affect the financial viability of Sage Grouse project as well as any other
considerations allocated to Blue Mountain BMPP as Sage Grouse has not and does not intend to
allow Blue Mountain BMPP to construct a Generating Facility on its land, as Blue Mountain
BMPP has represented it has the right to do. Pacificorp is therefore unable to comply with its
OATT, inclusive but not limited to Section 41.2.
1.
improperly reserve and allocate valuable Interconnection Capacity to Speculative Projects that
are favorable to PacifiCorps vertical integration business model and generation expansion
opportunities. These Speculative Projects do not meet the Commissions FERC Order 2003 &
Pacificorps OATT interconnection request standards of a valid Interconnection Request.
Therefore, such allocation of Interconnection Capacity, particularly in areas (such as the
location of the Sage Grouse project) where the Interconnection Capacity on Pacificorp's System
is extremely limited but the energy generation potential is extremely high, preserves, in favor of
Pacificorp, the regulated monopoly model80, the Commission seeks to change whereby utilities
owning and operating transmission lines have no obligation to allow others [ such as nonspeculative small generators not affiliated with Pacificorp, like Sage Grouse] to use them
[PacifiCorps Transmission Lines]81and ensure that qualifying facilities (QFs) met
statutory requirements82 This poses a significant barrier to the development of an
independent power industry. 83
80
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Such Speculative Projects (such as Blue Mountain BMPP) cloak themselves under the
guise of being Qualified Facility Projects, in order to further facilitate the collaboration that
PacifiCorp will eventually end up owning or at a minimum controlling the Project(s) and/or their
Generating Facilities and thus the energy generation potential of these Projects. This is of
potential importance with the Sage Grouse Project because it's parcels of lands surround a set of
parcels of land, once owned by Pacific Wind Development, LLC, a company once owned and/or
controlled by Pacificorp.
2. Pacificorps non-policed, complete control of the processing of Interconnection
Requests (and Requests for Indicative Pricing for that matter), enable it to bring forth and
implore trickery when it necessitates to reserve and allocate the Interconnection Capacity as it
sees fit to Interconnection Customers/QF Owners it determines to be favorable, where these
Interconnection Customers/QF Owners do not, have not, or cannot comply with the requirements
of the OATT, like Site Control. As such, without Pacificorp's trickery, this Interconnection
Capacity would otherwise be available to Non-Speculative Independent Small Generators, able
to meet OATT requirements, like Site Control requirements. These Non-speculative Generators,
are directly competing with Pacificorps non-regulated generation affiliates, including Pacific
Energy. Non-Speculative Independent QF Small Generators that are and continue to be outside
of the control of PacifiCorp, its generation affiliates and regulated operating divisions should be
able to enter into pricing contracts, that is receive reliable Indicative Pricing Proposals, the effect
of which is favorable to rate payers and regulated by the Federal Government to ensure
Pacificorp is not engaging in trickery. Speculative projects that are favorable to PacifiCorps
vertical integration business model are not likely be constructed, controlled and/or exist on
Pacificorps Transmission System, as independent small power generators non-affiliated with
Page 65 of 116
Pacificorps refusal to comply with its OATT regarding Blue Mountain BMPP, yet
conduct a rigorous, full LGIP Study Process compliance for Sage Grouse, while Blue Mountain
BMPP remains on the Queue with a non-existent (by PacifiCorp's own OATT Standards), or at
the least, invalid, Interconnection Request means PacifiCorp is unable to ensure the reliability of
the entire results of the LGIP Study Process, the Feasibility Study, the System Impact Study and
the Facility Study for Sage Grouse. Sage Grouse is unable to properly evaluate the viability and
potential of its project. As well, the information submitted by Blue Mountain to "get through"
Page 66 of 116
the LGIP Study Process in order to get to the execution of an LGIA seems to be riddled with
inconsistencies and inaccuracies further adding to the likelihood of a PacifiCorp required "Step
In" take over.
5.
Open Access to its entire Transmission System, and therefore access to neighboring systems by
selectively providing and denying access to Small Generators at the initial stages of the
Interconnection Process. Pacificorp has found a "loophole" gem, that allows it almost complete
control of its transmission system, and that is.......Interconnection! Regardless whether a PPA is
executed, with or without an executed LGIA, if the Interconnection Customer is unable, for any
reason, (interconnection capacity limitations, costs, tariff non-compliance) to actually secure the
ability to interconnect, then it is dead, and the project killed. It is PacifiCorp that is the
unpoliced gatekeeper for Interconnection to its Transmission System. Once again, the fox
watches the hen house.
6.
as mandated by Congress and required by both State and Federal laws. This is facilitated
through PacifiCorp's rigid and loose application of the tariff, OATT, based upon the
Interconnection Customer.
7.
PacifiCorp fails to manage Interconnection Requests in the order they are received
as required by the Commission and regulatory requirements. By loosely or rigidly applying the
tariff rules PacifiCorp is able to almost determine Queue Position.
8.
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9.
Places the Rates Payers at risk to pay higher utility prices due to Speculative
Projects being allocated Interconnection Capacity in order to prevent that Capacity from being
used by projects PacifiCorp views as competing with its vertical integration business model, its
merchant function and/or generation expansion opportunities.
10. PacifiCorps unilateral control of Interconnection access to its portion of the
Transmission System, which connects to other US transmission systems allows for transmission
of power could adversely affect the safety and security of the US transmission system due to the
singular concentration of one entity, PacifiCorp; such singular concentration could slow the
integration of a truly unified National Grid for the US as opposed to the patchwork of various
regional grid system.
Page 68 of 116
Page 69 of 116
17. Causes wholesale prices (and thereby retail prices) to be higher than they otherwise
likely would be with the influence of the effects of competing small generators that are outside
Pacificorps direct control or vertical integration portfolio expansion in the marketplace.
18. Allowing Pacificorp to improperly allocate and reserve limited Interconnection
Capacity to speculative projects, that would otherwise be available non-speculative projects that
would enter into long-term pricing contracts that are inevitably favorable to rate payers due to
their long term commitment. Projects that end up not being built inevitably subject rate payers to
higher prices due to the utility being required to enter the wholesale power market, paying higher
prices in order to service the energy needs of its customer base, based on the shortfall.
19. Commencement of the LGIP Study Process while Blue Mountain remains on the
Queue with a non-existent (by OATT Standards), or at the very least, an invalid, Interconnection
Request means Pacificorp is unable to ensure appropriate cost responsibility for interconnection
costs the Sage Grouse will be required to bear.
20. Allows Pacificorp to circumvent regulatory authority and effectively control open
access to its Transmission System by selectively providing and denying access to
Interconnection Customers to the Interconnection Process.
21. Fails to treat all customers equally and in a non-discriminatory manner as mandated
by Congress and required by both State and Federal laws.
22. Fails to manage Interconnection Requests in the order they are received as required
by FERC and regulatory requirements, due to such trickery as manipulation of the Transmission
Queue.
23. Fails to adhere to the unified application of Common Interconnection Requirements
required for all projects and Interconnection Customers.
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24. Effectively quashes the competitive initiatives state and federal regulatory authorities
impose in order to remove significant barriers of entry to the open access of the Transmission
Systems of Investor Owned Utilities such as Pacificorp.
25. Makes a mockery of voluntary compliance and uniform application by multibillion dollar utilities, equivalent to the wolf watching the chicken coop.
26. Thwarts FERC Orders 888 and 889 regarding open access to Transmission Systems
by strategic manipulation of the initial entry point to the transmission process, Interconnection.
27. Allows the non-regulated generation division of Pacificorp to expedite execution of
Power Purchase Agreements with Interconnection Customers favorable to Pacificorp in order to
block Transmission opportunities of unfavorable and/or less desirable Interconnection Customers
by discriminatory application of the OATT.
28. Allows Pacificorp to expand its monopolistic power to influence energy prices rate
payers/retail customers pay by effectively controlling the supply of available generation, thereby
affecting the pattern of demand in areas. This has monstrous social effects and well as direct
effects upon the business and private sector economies of areas.
29. Causes wholesale prices (and thereby retail prices) to be higher than they otherwise
likely would be with the influence of the effects of small generators outside PacifiCorps direct
control or vertical integration portfolio expansion n the marketplace.
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Page 72 of 116
2.
3.
Sanction PacifiCorp for its purposeful violation of its OATT and FERC LGIP;
4.
Require PacifiCorp to pay any additional Interconnection Costs associated with the Site
Control scheme orchestrated to keep Sage Grouse from securing open access to
Pacificorps Transmission System.
5.
Require PacifiCorp to pay any additional Transmission Costs associated with the Site
Control scheme orchestrated to keep Sage Grouse from securing open access to
Pacificorps Transmission System.
6.
Perform due diligence on future Interconnection Request to verify that the claims of Site
Control are proper in light of actual and constructive notices;
7.
8.
Require PacifiCorp to put Sage Grouse into the position it would have been if the
regulatory requirements had been complied with by all parties and equally administered
by PacifiCorp as required by Federal and State law, the Commission Orders, and
PacifiCorps OATT.
Page 73 of 116
The basis for the request is that PacifiCorp had actual and constructive knowledge that
Blue Mountain BMPPs Interconnection Request, and Site Control, was based on Properties that
it did not and will never own or control, as required by PacifiCorps OATT. Further, PacifiCorp
has inconsistently applied its OATT to favor Blue Mountain BMPP and to discriminate against
Sage Grouse.
Page 74 of 116
(9) STATE:
(i) WHETHER THE ENFORCEMENT HOTLINE, DISPUTE
RESOLUTION SERVICE, TARIFF-BASED DISPUTE RESOLUTION
MECHANISMS, OR OTHER INFORMAL DISPUTE RESOLUTION
PROCEDURES WERE USED, OR WHY THESE PROCEDURES
WERE NOT USED.
Sage Grouse contacted FERC and was directed to file a FERC Complaint
pursuant to 18 C.F.R 385.206(a) Complaints (Rule 206) (a) General rule. Any person
may file a complaint seeking Commission action against any other person alleged to be in
contravention or violation of any statute, rule, order, or other law administered by the
Commission, or for any other alleged wrong over which the Commission may have
jurisdiction to open a Docket because there were many issues and concerns that need to
be addressed and opening a Docket with a Formal Complaint would be the best
opportunity for resolution.
No. Sage Grouse initiated and requested meetings, and communications whereby
PacifiCorp did not participate in good faith, refused to acknowledge the issues and
waived arbitration. A simple letter memorializing Sage Grouse's parcels of land were not
included in either of the Blue Mountain BMPP Interconnection Requests would resolve
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the concern. PacifiCorp refused, leading Sage Grouse to believe that in fact, the LGIA
and now, PPA are based upon Sage Grouse's land.
Page 76 of 116
Page 77 of 116
(c) SERVICE. ANY PERSON FILING A COMPLAINT MUST SERVE A COPY OF THE
COMPLAINT ON THE RESPONDENT, AFFECTED REGULATORY AGENCIES, AND
OTHERS THE COMPLAINANT REASONABLY KNOWS MAY BE EXPECTED TO
BE-------------- AFFECTED BY THE COMPLAINT. SERVICE MUST BE
SIMULTANEOUS WITH FILING AT THE COMMISSION FOR RESPONDENTS.
SIMULTANEOUS OR OVERNIGHT SERVICE IS PERMISSIBLE FOR OTHER
AFFECTED ENTITIES. SIMULTANEOUS SERVICE CAN BE ACCOMPLISHED BY
ELECTRONIC MAIL IN ACCORDANCE WITH 385.2010(f)(3), FACSIMILE,
EXPRESS DELIVERY OR MESSENGER.
Page 78 of 116
Addition Concerns
II. CONSPIRACY SHAM PROJECTS
In the last ten (10) years in the State of Utah, PacifiCorp has only executed six (6) wind
PPAs, four (4) of which were executed all submitted for PSC approval on July 9, 2013 in an
effort to block open access to one truly independent, Interconnection Customer, Ellis-Hall
Consultants, LLC that has the means and ability to challenge PacifiCorps planned strategy to
maintain its vertical integration business model in a monopolistic fashion in order to facilitate
access to Transmission Services, to inevitably improve the market for the ultimate consumer. Of
the six (6) projects, the simultaneous execution of the four (4) of them are shams and potentially
reach the level of criminal conspiracy.
A. PLANNED STEP-IN TAKE OVERS
PacifiCorp has skillfully and purposefully circumvented the Commission and regulatory
authority to push forward small generators that it intends to takeover 84 by collaborating with
shills, masking as independent Interconnection Customers and QF Owners, using PURPA, a
[It is important for the Commission to be aware that on February 22, 2013, a Complaint was lodged against PacifiCorp by Ros
Vrba for Energy of Utah, Utah PSC Docket No. 13-.035-22 , whereby one of Mr. Vrbas complaints was that PacifiCorp took nine
(9) months to fulfill his Request for Indicative Pricing, and refused to execute a PPA with him for his project until he secured an
Interconnection Agreement. Mr. Vrba, a former member of REDCO aka REDCO Power (same entity) pointed out to PacifiCorp
that Blue Mountain Wind 1, LLC was able to negotiate and fully execute a PPA in fifteen (15) days, without an Interconnection
Agreement. Mr. Vrba also complained PacifiCorp used a completely different pricing methodology to compute the pricing for
his projects Indicative Pricing whereby the Blue Mountain Wind 1, LLC received favorable PPA pricing based upon the Market
Proxy Methodology, a more favorable methodology for pricing. Circumstances of the Vrba Complaint are further discussed in
the Complaint regarding PacifiCorp doing an about face and allowing Mr. Vrba to execute two (2) PPAs in exchange for
dismissing his Complaint so that the Complaint would not heard and a decisive ruling be issued by the PSC. Such a ruling would
have made it difficult for PacifiCorp to continue with a collaborative scheme to keep an Interconnection Customer from
accessing PacifiCorps Transmission System. This Complaint is referenced to bring to the Commissions attention the extended
time period PacifiCorp took (PacifiCorp is required to provide Indicative Pricing within thirty (30) days of a request) to merely
provide the pricing for Mr. Vrbas Indicative Pricing Request, where Blue Mountain Wind 1, LLC executed a PPA in at a
minimum, 15 days or a maximum of 64 days.] PacifiCorp is also on the record with the Utah PSC recently complaining of
staffing constraints despite the companys net worth being more than $35 Billion dollars. The entire Docket for the Vrba
Complaint (less the PacifiCorp Draft PPA) is attached as Exhibit 51.].
Page 79 of 116
federal mandate, to aid in advancing schemes designed to put right back into the hands of
PacifiCorp, the generation facilities and projects Federal Authorities and Congress seek to
diversify.
These Step-In Take Over Schemes are characterized correctly as mere planned
Defaults where by PacifiCorp is able to seize control of the operations (Step-In) of a project
and its generation facility based upon ridiculously generous Step-In Rights selectively
included in the Terms and Conditions of Power Purchase Agreements (PPA). Such Step-In
Rights, or more accurately Step-In Schemes allow PacifiCorp to ride in like a knight in
shining armor and save a project from failing for the benefit of delivering the power to the rate
payer, when the intention ALL along, from the projects inception was for PacifiCorp to ride in
and seize the project.
Such planned Step-In Schemes allow PacifiCorp to effectively control the project until
PacifiCorp can:
1) exercise the Purchase provisions within the PPA or
2) complete a pre-planned ownership take over or
3) wait until the entity that owns the project files Bankruptcy, thereby allowing PacifiCorp to:
a) secure control of the generating facility due to default or
b) Step In and complete construction etc of the project or
c) seize the project (and its generating facility) as the collateral satisfaction for a
debt PacifiCorp is owed as a secured (or unsecured) creditor.
Page 80 of 116
1. STEP-IN SCHEME #1
85
Exhibit 52: Utah PSC Docket No. 11-035-196: In the Matter of: the Application of PacifiCorp dba Rocky Mountain Power for
the Approval of the Power Purchase Agreement between PacifiCorp and Blue Mountain Wind 1, LLC.
86
Renewable Energy Development Corporation aka REDCO aka REDCO Power. REDCO is the entity that just filed a Chapter 7
Petition for Bankruptcy in the District of Utah on December 30, 2011. The expired and perfected Option Agreements listed in
its Schedules as assets are the subject of all of these happenings, due to the prime location of the land, in one of the only wind
regimes in Utah.
Page 81 of 116
4) REDCO has secured 6,927 acres of private land in the corridor of some of
the best windin the State of Utah.
5) REDCOhas received all permits to construct up to 400 MW of windon
the site.
6)
Upon information and belief, Bruce Griswold has worked for PacifiCorp, and in the
energy industry for over twenty (20) years, and appears to be in charge of negotiating almost
ALL of PacifiCorps PPAs. The mere suggestion that he overlooked such a fundamental critical
component of the PPA, the Scheduled Commercial Operation Date, which is the date the wind
farm goes in to operations and begins to export is not simply not a reasonable conclusion.
PacifiCorp knew exactly what was going on, a planned default take over and Mr. Griswold
appears to have facilitated the fast tracking of the PPA. Once the PPA was executed, the only
outstanding issue was the retrieval of the core land contracts (the Roring Family land) from the
bankruptcy estate.
On June 19, 2003, the Roring Family executed a Wind Energy Lease Agreement 87 (Wind
Agreement) with Pacific Wind Development, a holding company for PacifiCorp. The Wind
Agreement had a TERM limitation built into the contract. If within five (5) years, by June 19,
2008, PacifiCorp installed at least one (1) wind generation turbine, the contract automatically
extends for a term of thirty (30) years, to June 19, 2033. If within five (5) years there are no wind
87
Exhibit 53: June 19, 2003, Wind Energy Lease Agreement, executed by members of the Roring Family and Peter C. van
Alderwerelt, Vice-President of Pacific Wind Development, LLC, an Oregon Limited Liability Company owned by PacifiCorp at the
time of execution.
Page 82 of 116
generation turbines installed, the contract term terminates. PacifiCorp did not install any wind
generation turbines on the Roring Family land.
The Roring Family had later executed Option Agreements with REDCO in 2010. Their
windy, wide open land of almost 4500 acres was the core area, and subject land of the Blue
Mountain Wind 1, PPA as identified in Exhibit 3.2.4, REQUIRED FACILITY DOCUMENTS 88
and Exhibit 3.2.7, WIND LEASES89 of the Blue Mountain Wind 1, PPA. The other lands were
not feasible due to their proximate to the City of Monticello Airport.
PacifiCorp had executed the Blue Mountain Wind 1, PPA, in record time, in less than a
month, and merely needed to secure control of the Roring Family land. The plan was for the
REDCO Estate Trustee, George B. Hofmann, IV, Esq., and his law firm, Parsons Kinghorn
Harris (PKH) (which represented the largest REDCO principals other company, and the
REDCO Estate, simultaneously) 90 to sell the Roring Family Option Agreements91 back to the
newly reconstituted entity comprised of the largest REDCO principal and other REDCO insiders,
in order to regroup the project back together and move forward under Blue Mountain Wind 1,
LLC. (also see Exhibit 42). The sale of the Roring Family Option Agreements by the REDCO
Trustee back to the REDCO insiders new entity closed on January 30, 2012. Again in record
time, thirty (30) days after REDCO filed Chapter 7 bankruptcy.
88
Exhibit 54: EXHIBIT 3.2.4, REQUIRED FACILITY DOCUMENTS and EXHIBIT 3.2.7, WIND LEASES, of the Blue Mountain Wind 1,
LLC PPA executed by Blue Mountain Wind 1, LLC and Bruce Griswold, of PacifiCorp on November 8, 2011.
89
Exhibit 55: EXHIBIT 3.2.7, WIND LEASES, of the Blue Mountain Wind 1, LLC, PPA executed by Blue Mountain Wind 1, LLC and
Bruce Griswold, of PacifiCorp on November 8, 2011.
90
No disclosure was filed with the Bankruptcy Court disclosing that PKH represented the largest REDCO principals other entity .
This was not disclosed as part of the Declaration of Proposed Attorney submitted with the law firms Application to be
employed as the Trustees counsel. Judge William T. Thurman approved the Application filed by PKH allowing for the Trustees
firm (and the largest principals firm) to represent the Trustee.
91
And substantially all the REDCO bankruptcy estate assets, for $40,000 cash; $1,058,767.12 in the form of a credit bid of the
claim of the largest secured creditor; the assumption of other secured debts totaling $2,153,643.10 respectively therefore
shedding close to$1,512,465.80 of unsecured debt by discharge)
Page 83 of 116
It appeared that everything was in place and now PacifiCorp needed the PSC to approve
the PPA, and Pacificorp could just wait for the Commercial Operation Dates to pass so
PacifiCorp could Step-In. There was NO POSSIBLE way Blue Mountain Wind 1, could
achieve full operations by that date, which was 13 months after the PPA execution. Since Blue
Mountain Wind 1, was not the bankruptcy entity, the PPA was safe from being sold. Pacificorp
entered the REDCO bankruptcy docket on February 29, 201292 just to make sure, and filed a
Limited Objection on March 2, 201293 ensuring that the Court knew Blue Mountain Wind 1,
LLC was not the bankrupt entity so the PPA could not be sold, thereby protecting the PPA with
the most favorable PPA pricing to date of most PacifiCorp PPAs.94
The REDCO planners, had not had the chance to move the Roring Family Option
Agreements out of REDCO and to Blue Mountain Wind 1, before REDCO filed bankruptcy,
December 30, 2011, seven (7) days after receiving a uni-lateral cancellation notice on December
23, 2011, from SNR Denton95, a law firm in Chicago representing the Prudential Insurance
Company of America, an entity worth over $731 Billon US dollars. Christine B. Fisher, Esq.,
Partner stated in the letter to REDCO:
We have been advised by our clientthat certain information furnished by
REDCO contained material misrepresentations with respect to the financial
condition of REDCOAs a result, our client has elected to terminate the Option
Agreements.
It appears this letter accelerated what in all probability would have been a planned
bankruptcy the following year ahead.
92
Exhibit 56: Notice of Appearance filed by Robert Prince of Kirkham McConkie on behalf of Pacificorp Energy, the nonregulated generation division of PacifiCorp.
93
Exhibit 57: Limited Objection filed by Robert Prince of Kirkham McConkie on behalf of Pacificorp Energy, the non-regulated
generation division of PacifiCorp.
94
Exhibit 41: Memorandum from Blue Mountain BMPP Consultant Ben Kerl stating a PacifiCorp employee advised him that
PacifiCorp would be able to increase the price of the PPA.
95
Exhibit 43: Letter executed by Christine B. Fisher, Esq. Partner in SNR Denton, dated December 23, 2011 advising REDCO of
uni-lateral termination of Option Agreements based upon material misrepresentations made by REDCO.
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Nevertheless, all PacifiCorp had to do to Step-In and take over the project was wait for
the Operation Dates to pass, and follow Section 11.8 Step-In Rights
11.8. Step-In Rights, 11.8.1 Failure to Achieve Commercial Operation: if
Seller fails to achieve Commercial Operation of the Facility by the
Guaranteed Commercial Operation Date (on or about March 31,
2013)PacifiCorp shall have the right to enter the Facility and do all such
things as PacifiCorp may consider necessary or desirable,to complete the
Facility and cause Commercial Operation to occur;
However, things did not progress so smoothly for Pacificorp and the parties. The
problems began, first when the newspaper article was published, including the PPA contract
pricing. The article also disclosed detailed terms and so on. Then PacifiCorp was contacted
about the PPA. PacifiCorp was forced to scramble and perform damage control before any
regulatory agency caught on to its scheme. The default provisions of the PPA allowed
PacifiCorp to Step In within a mere 1 years from the effective date of the PPA, taking
control of the project until PacifiCorp could 1) exercise the Purchase Provisions of the PPA or 2)
the Interconnection Customer/QF Owner filed Bankruptcy (as is the case with REDCO). The 1 st
DEFAULT mechanism of this particular Scheme was the Scheduled Commercial Operating Date
of December 31, 2012. PacifiCorp, an Investor Owned Utility, fully executed a PPA on
November 8, 2011, whereby the Scheduled Commercial Operations Date (SCOD) was
December 31, 2012, a year and 1 month after the execution of the PPA.
PacifiCorp sought to perform damage control, and kindly filed a notice with the PSC
requesting that the developer and Pacificorp be allowed some time to further negotiate a new
more reliable COD date. PacifiCorp expressed concern for the developer and wanted to help
them by allowing them time further negotiate.
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This Project, the Blue Mountain Wind 1, Project had not even commenced a study on the
LGIP Study Process, which by PacifiCorps own admission take a minimum of eighteen (18) to
twenty-four (24) months to complete. Again, the Scheduled Commercial Operations Date was
thirteen (13) months from the execution date of the PPA. No wind turbine generators had even
been ordered. There is NO WAY Blue Mountain Wind 1, LLC, was EVER going to ever be able
to meet the Scheduled Operations Date, so then, pursuant to Section 11.8 (above) followed by
11.8.2 License to Operate Facility: Seller hereby irrevocably grants to PacifiCorp, the
right, license, and authority to enter the Premises, operate and maintain the Facility, and to
perform Sellers obligations hereunder for the Term [twenty (20) years] during the
continuance of an Event of Default by the Seller.
the PSC to approve the PPA, Pacificorp requested on December 14, 2011, that the PSC allow for
time to re-negotiate the COD date for the PPA. Pacificorp did not withdraw its application and
to date has not withdrawn the its application, as if it is successful in killing both the Sage Grouse
project and the Ellis-Hall project, it will likely be able to reassemble the land and move forward
as if nothing had ever happened.
The second problem was that the core subject Option Agreements for this land, the
Roring Family land, that were once under contract to PacifiCorp were sold by the REDCO
insiders. The favored Blue Mountain BMPP Interconnection Customer shill was seeking to
purchase them. But the Roring Family Option Agreements were sold to a wind farm developer
and philanthropist, the principal of Ellis-Hall Consultants, LLC. Ellis-Hall purchased the Roring
Option Agreements and immediately converted the Options to Lease Agreements and began
developing the project. Mr. Hall was contacted by George B. Hofmann, IV, Esq. and directed to
sell the now Lease Agreements back. Mr. Hall declined. Mr. Hall was approached by many
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parties, including PacifiCorp and asked if he was interested in selling the Lease Agreements. He
declined. And as a result, Pacificorp has mounted a massive complex network of schemes to
kill Ellis-Halls project with hopes that the Roring Leases are abandoned. This is of great
significance to Sage Grouse because Sage Grouse is slated to interconnect to PacifiCorps
transmission system through Ellis-Halls collector/connector substation.
PacifiCorp has
embarked in trickery and worse in order to kill both Ellis-Halls project and Sage Grouses
project.
PacifiCorps action have led to this Complaint being filed in hopes that the Commission
will require PacifiCorp to apply its OATT and FERC LGIP equally to all Interconnection
Customers; require PacifiCorp to cease with its disparaged treatment of Sage Grouses project;
require PacifiCorp to cease the inflammatory blatant discriminatory actions towards both Sage
Grouse as a project and its principal, a black woman, that in an effort to bring the Sage Grouse
project to fruition has been forced to suffer indignities and injustices that have been long
outlawed in the United States of America.
Sage Grouse, an Interconnection Customer, deemed unfavorable by PacifiCorp has been
held to more stringent standards and requirements, in excess of those mandated by the FERC
LGIP and Pacificorps OATT, in an attempt to hold it back. Such standards and requirements
have not been applied to Interconnection Customers Pacificorp deems favorable in order to push
those Interconnection Customers forward ahead of Sage Grouse. Pacificorps efforts clearly are
to push Sage Grouse back and spring board those favored Interconnection Customers forward
ahead of it.
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Despite this unfair imbalance, Sage Grouse has complied with ALL requirements.
Pacificorp has elected to continue to ignore regulatory requirements in order to leap frog less
prepared Interconnection Customers forward, ahead of Sage Grouse.
I. SITE CONTROL
B. LATIGO WIND PARK, LLC
1. Wasatch Wind Intermountain, LLCs wind project named Latigo Wind Farm, LLC did
not have ANY of the requisite Lease Agreements or Option Agreements with the land
owners when Pacificorp deemed complete their Interconnection Request.
Blue Mountain BMPP is not the first time PacifiCorp has violated the FERC LGIP and
OATT with regard to Site Control for its Large Generation Interconnection Process Queue for
the benefit of Interconnection Customers/QF Owners it seeks to either purchase or step-in and
control. In fact, PacifiCorp has been successfully doing this for years, evidenced back as far
back as 2008 with Latigo. It is through the strategic, deliberate, purposeful manipulation of the
Interconnection Process and Queue Positions within this process that PacifiCorp has been able to
advance a discriminatory application of the OATT. PacifiCorps willful non-compliance with
the Commissions Orders has allowed PacifiCorp to successfully and effectively circumvent
regulatory authority. Pacificorps actions enable it to control and deny open access to its
transmission system by truly independent Interconnection Customers such as Sage Grouse.
These actions allow PacifiCorp to not only maintain its natural monopolistic operations, but
further expand its monopolistic stranglehold on the electrical transmission system in the western
and northwestern United States; as well as its continued expansion eastward toward the great
Page 88 of 116
Mississippi River. Such dominance is facilitated through the control and disparaged
administration of its OATT, while PacifiCorp purports to be in compliance with all regulatory
agencies & policies. This just simply is not true.
Latigo Wind Park, LLC, Queue #384, and at one time Queue #219-A & #219-B is yet
another project of a PacifiCorp favored Interconnection Customer, Wasatch Wind Intermountain,
LLC (Wasatch Wind) that has yet again, been allowed to reserve and allocate valuable
Interconnection Capacity when in fact it did and cannot comply with the Terms and Conditions
of the OATT. Such reservations deter other Interconnection Customers.
On May 5, 2008, PacifiCorp received two (2) 100 MW Interconnection Requests from
Wasatch Wind for projects located near the City of Monticello in San Juan County, Utah. Upon
information and believe, PacifiCorp deemed complete the Interconnection Requests on or about
May 10, 2008. Neither of these Interconnection Requests complied with FERC ORDER 2003 or
OATT.
The Interconnection Requests failed to demonstrate the requisite Site Control. In fact,
some land owners did not even know their land was being included in an Interconnection
Request for the purpose of constructing a Generating Facility and Interconnection Customers
Interconnection Facilities in order to sell power to PacifiCorp. Despite this failure to
demonstrate Site Control, PacifiCorp still allowed Wasatch Wind to reserve 200 MW of
Interconnection Capacity. PacifiCorp commenced a Feasibility Study which was completed
August 15, 200896. The Feasibility Study revealed costs initially assessed to the Interconnection
Customer, which if the Interconnection Customer waited, a portion of said costs would be
eventually be absorbed by PacifiCorp and PacifiCorps construction of a new Power Station. As
96
Exhibit 58: August 15, 2008, PacifiCorp Feasibility Study for Q#0219, Wasatch Wind Project.
Page 89 of 116
such, Wasatch Wind opted to not move forward on the projects at that time. Nevertheless, the
Interconnection Requests had been deemed complete by PacifiCorp, despite not having the
requisite Site Control as required by the OATT.
On March 25, 2011, Mr. Brent Woodward, CFO of Wasatch Wind (Mr. Woodward)
prepared a cover letter97 for an Interconnection Request, including area of land previously
submitted in the May 5, 2008 Interconnection Request. Three (3) years had since passed since
the original Interconnection Requests, and the project appeared to be more economically
feasible. The nameplate capacity had been reduced, however also most everything else remained
the same, including the footprint and the land area. It was a proposed project near the City of
Monticello, in San Juan County, Utah. Mr. Woodwards Cover Letter identified four (4)
Attachments as follows:
Attachment A: This attachment include the Project maps.
Point of Interconnect Map
Project Location Map
Attachment B: Project Electrical Oneline Diagram, Drawing E1-1
Attachment C: Appendix 1 for the LGIP
Attachment D: Evidence of site control
97
Exhibit 59: March 25, 2011, Cover letter for Interconnection Request authored by Brent Woodward, CFO for Wasatch Wind
Intermountain, LLC dba Latigo Wind Park, LLC to PacifiCorps Tom Fishback, LGIA Queue Manager.
Page 90 of 116
The proposed project had NO Site Control98 of any kind, nothing. No Leases, no
Options, or anything of the like in place and therefore could not comply with the OATTs
requirement to demonstrate Site Control at the time of its submission to PacifiCorp. The Project
Developer (and owner of Wasatch Wind), Mrs. Christine Watson Mikell (Ms. Mikell)
intercepted or caused to be intercepted, the original cover letter authored by Mr. Woodward and
replaced it with a cover letter99 she authored, or caused to be authored, whereby the reference to
Attachment D: Site Control was removed because Wasatch Wind in fact had NO Site Control
documentation to submit. Ms. Mikell then mailed or caused to be mailed, the Interconnection
Request, with the new cover letter and no Site Control documentation attached, to PacifiCorp100.
On March 30, 2011, PacifiCorp received the Latigo Wind Park, LLC, Interconnection
Request and assigned a Queue Position of #0384. At this point in the Interconnection Process,
PacifiCorp is required to acknowledge receipt of the Interconnection Request within five (5)
Business Days of receipt of the request and attach a copy of the received Interconnection
Request to the acknowledgement. FERC LGIP 3.3.2 and OATT (IV)(38)(2)101 Five (5)
Business Days from PacifiCorps March 30, 2011 receipt of the Interconnection Request was
April 6, 2011. PacifiCorp failed to comply with OATT(IV)(38)(2) and acknowledge receipt of
the Interconnection Request. PacifiCorps actions demonstrate the collaborative efforts of
98
Exhibit 60: March 30, 2011, Specifics for the Latigo Wind Park, LLC Project, Interconnection Overview Map; Chart of Land
Owners for the Map identifying the names and parcel numbers of the Generating Facility, Transmission Line, and Collector
substation (identifying NO Site Control); No Site Control documentation had been secured or recorded; and three (3) land
owners granted no easements.
99
Exhibit 61: March 25, 2011, Cover letter for Interconnection Request authored by Christine Watson Mikell, CFO for Wasatch
Wind Intermountain, LLC dba Latigo Wind Park, LLC to PacifiCorps Tom Fishback, LGIA Queue Manager
100
Exhibit 62: Interconnection Request for Latigo Wind Park, LLC, Queue #0384 sent to PacifiCorp.
101
Exhibit 63: FERC LGIP, Page 14, Section 3.3.2 and Page 133 of OATT: 38.3.2 Acknowledgment of Interconnection Request.
Transmission Provider shall acknowledge receipt of the Interconnection Request within five (5) Business Days of receipt of the
request and attach a copy of the received Interconnection Request to the acknowledgement.
Page 91 of 116
PacifiCorp to facilitate a later notification date for Latigo so that they could try to secure the
requisite Site Control.
PacifiCorp officially notified Latigo on April 11, 2011 of the Site Control deficiency.
Pursuant to the OATT, Latigo would then have ten (10) business days from PacifiCorps belated
notification to cure the Site Control deficiency. This provided Latigo with an extra five (5) days
to cure the Site Control deficiency atop the ten (10) days it was receiving pursuant to the OATT.
At this point in the Interconnection Process, PacifiCorp is also required to secure from Latigo a
posting of an additional deposit of $10,000.102 FERC LGIP 3.3.1.iii and OATT (IV)(38)(3)(1)(iii)
Again, PacifiCorp failed to require that Latigo post an additional deposit of $10,000.
On April 23, 2011, Latigo secured an agreement with Mr. J. Redd, the Managing
Principal of Redd Enterprises. Redd Enterprises owned 1,080 acres of land which comprised the
core portion of the Latigo project, and was where the Collector Substation would be located. Mr.
Redd, agreed to grant Latigo permission to ONLY erect a meteorological wind data
measurement tower103 on the land, nothing else. No turbines, no substation, no transmission
cable, no buildings, nothing except a meteorological wind data measurement tower. Neither Mr.
Redd, nor Redd Enterprises gave Latigo permission to erect wind generation turbines on the
property. This agreement to erect a meteorological tower is not sufficient to satisfy the
demonstration of Site Control as required by the OATT. It certainly isnt sufficient to allow
Latigo to construct a Generating Facility104, an Interconnection Customer's device for the
102
Exhibit 64: FERC LGIP, Page 14, Section 3.3.1(iii) and Page 132 OATT, 38.3.1 Initiating an Interconnection Request. To
initiate an Interconnection Request, Interconnection Customer must submit all of the following: (i) a $10,000 deposit, (ii) a
completed application in the form of Appendix 1, and (iii) demonstration of Site Control or a posting of an additional deposit of
$10,000.
103
Exhibit 65: CERTIFIED DOCUMENT: April 23, 2011, Wind Energy Evaluation Agreement, Entry No. 113060 Book 928 , pg 360366.
104
Exhibit 13: FERC LGIP, Page 4, Section 1 and Page 119 of OATT (IV)( 36) Definitions: Generating Facility shall mean
Interconnection Customer's device for the production of electricity identified in the Interconnection Request, but shall not
include the Interconnection Customer's Interconnection Facilities.
Page 92 of 116
Exhibit 4: FERC LGIP, Page 9, Section 1 and Page 125, OATT (IV)(3) Site Control shall mean documentation reasonably demonstrating: (1)
ownership of, a leasehold interest in, or a right to develop a site for the purpose of constructing the Generating Facility; (2) an option to
purchase or acquire a leasehold site for such purpose; or (3) an exclusivity or other business relationship between Interconn ection Customer
and the entity having the right to sell, lease or grant Interconnection Customer the right to possess or occupy a site for such purpose.
106
Exhibit 66: April 25, 2011 Letter from Tom Fishback of PacifiCorp deeming complete Latigo Wind Park, LLCs deficient of Site Control, invalid
Interconnection Request.
107
Exhibit 67: Page 3 of 16, Latigo Wind Park June 29, 2012, Conditional Use Permit Application submitted to San Juan County
Planning Commission.
Page 93 of 116
PacifiCorp was required, under a proper application of OATT, to deem withdrawn the
Latigo Interconnection Request. FERC LGIP 3.6 and OATT (IV)(38)(6). PacifiCorp failed to
properly apply the provisions of OATT, by not securing the posting of the additional $10,000.00
deposit; not deeming withdrawn the Interconnection Request, resulting in a loss of queue
position due to the failure to demonstrate site control; and not retaining both the initial and
additional deposits; PacifiCorp ignored all of these requirements of the OATT and deemed
complete the Latigo Interconnection Request. At this point, Latigo still had no Site Control at all
for ANY of the parcels of land comprising its proposed project 108. Despite this, PacifiCorp
allowed Latigo to remain on the LGIA Queue retaining its Queue Position of #0384 thereby
reserving 59.2 MW of valuable Interconnection Capacity, where the generation opportunities far
outweigh the Interconnection and Transmission capacities.
There is absolutely no question that both PacifiCorp and Latigo absolutely knew Latigo
could not demonstrate the requisite Site Control. This is further evidenced by Latigos public
admission that the project did not have the requisite Site Control as late as Jun 29, 2012
June 29, 2011, Conditional Use Permit Application for Latigo Wind Park
Page 3 of 16
Note: At the time of submittal of the CUP application, Redd Enterprises representing
1,080 acres, has not signed the lease agreement to allow turbines to be placed on its
land. However, WWI expects that this lease agreement will be signed prior to the CUP
hearing on July 5.
(well over a year after they submitted their Interconnection Request, and over a month after the
completed the LGIP Study Process.). To assist Latigo, PacifiCorp and save them $10,000.00 as
108
Exhibit 68: Chart of the parcel numbers and land owners for the Interconnection Request Map for the Latigo Wind Park,
project, reflecting the status of the Site Control on April 25, 2011.
Page 94 of 116
a study fee, PacifiCorp used the Feasibility Study results from the May 5, 2008 Queue #219
project (the same project with no Site Control back in 2008), and incorporated them into the
System Impact Study, completed on September 21, 2011109, the Dynamic Stability Study,
completed September 21, 2011110 and the Final Facilities Study, completed and issued on March
16, 2012111, thereby completing the LGIP Study Process, despite Latigo not having ANY of
the parcels of land under proper contract. None of these land owners had any knowledge that
their land was being evaluated for the benefit of Latigo. In fact, several Land Owners did not
even know their land was part of a proposed QF wind farm project until Latigo submitted an
Application for a Conditional Use Permit on June 29, 2012 to the County or when PacifiCorp
applied for approval of the PPA on July 9, 2013.112
On June 29, 2012, Latigo submitted its Conditional Use Permit (CUP) Application to
the San Juan County Planning Commission. This CUP Application was the subject of a public
hearing on July 5, 2012. In its presentation, which included the written CUP Application, Latigo
makes the following admissions:
1) Page 3 of 16
Note: At the time of submittal of the CUP [June 29, 2012], Redd Enterprises
representing 1,080 acres, has not signed the lease agreement to allow turbines to be
placed on its land.113
109
Exhibit 69: September 21, 2011, PacifiCorp System Impact Study for Queue #0384, Latigo Wind Park
110
Exhibit 70: September 21, 2011, PacifiCorp Dynamic Stability Study for Queue #0384, Latigo Wind Park
111
Exhibit 71: March 16, 2012, PacifiCorp FINAL Facilities Study for Queue #0384, Latigo Wind Park
112
Exhibit 72: Letters from land owners Guy and Ginger Tracy, Corinne Nielson Roring and Sandy and Gail Johnson advising
PacifiCorp they did not know their land to be used in this Latigo Project.
113
Exhibit 73: June 29, 2012, Conditional Use Permit Application, Latigo Wind Park, Page 3 of 16 Section IV: Land and Road
Access Note: At the time of submittal of the CUP [June 29, 2012], Redd Enterprises representing 1,080 acres, has not signed the
lease agreement to allow turbines to be placed on its land.
Page 95 of 116
The Redd Enterprises land is the location of the projects Generating Facility collector
substation, and the transmission line from the collection substation to the Point of
Interconnection, Pinto Substation. It is also the primary land area of the project, and Latigo only
received permission to erect a Meteorological Wind Data Measuring Tower on April 23, 2011
for the exclusive purpose of collecting wind data only. Again, this is further evidenced by their
statements in their CUP Application. PacifiCorp deemed complete the Interconnection Request,
despite this failure of demonstrating Site Control, and failed to implement a remedy when the
public acknowledgement was made. Latigo clearly makes a representation on the public record
that it still did not have the requisite Site Control on June 29, 2012 so at the time of the
submission of their March 25, 2011 Interconnection Request, and on April 25, 2011 when
PacifiCorp deemed complete the Interconnection Request [pursuant to OATT(IV)(38)(3)(1)(iii)]
it was IMPOSSIBLE for them to have had it.
Admissions regarding Site Control continue to include:
2) Page 3 of 16
Note: One of the properties crossed by the potential transmission line is currently in
probate (J. Ward Palmer). The family has stated it will sign the easement once out of
probate114
At the time of the March 25, 2011 submission of the Interconnection Request, and on
April 25, 2011 when PacifiCorp deemed complete the Interconnection Request, no lease
agreement for the easement or purchase agreement for the land required for the transmission line
was in place as required by OATT(IV)(38)(3)(1)(iii). The Estate is in Probate. The results of
that cannot be known, and were not known at the time of the submission of the Interconnection
114
Exhibit 74: June 29, 2012, Conditional Use Permit Application, Latigo Wind Park, Page 3 of 16 Section IV: Land and Road
Access, Note: One of the properties crossed by the potential transmission line is currently in probate (J. Ward Palmer). The
family has stated it will sign the easement once out of probate.
Page 96 of 116
Request and at the time of the CUP Application. Bottom line, a maybe we might get it does
not satisfy the requisite for Site Control. This property could go to a party that is not interested
in giving an easement, or one that is, its unknown, its speculative. That is exactly what FERC
Order 2003 and the OATT preventSpeculative projects being allowed to reserve
Interconnection or Transmission Capacity for months or in this case years, when in fact there are
other projects that are waiting that are not speculative.
3) Page 3 of 16
Note: Additionally, a of a mile stretch of transmission line is not signed.115
At the time of the March 25, 2011 submission of the Interconnection Request, and on April 25,
2011 when PacifiCorp deemed complete the Interconnection Request, no lease agreement for the
easement or purchase agreement for the land required for the transmission line was in place as
required by OATT(IV)(38)(3)(1)(iii). Over a year later and the transmission line from the
collector substation to the Point of Interconnection has not been secured, and obviously if it is
not under contract now, it was not under contract on March 30, 2011 when PacifiCorp received
the Interconnection Request and on April 25, 2011 when PacifiCorp deemed complete the
invalid Interconnection Request.
4) Page 4 of 16
Latigo Wind Park will also obtain encroachment permits from the Utah Department of
Transportation (UDOT) for crossing Highway 191 and Highway 491with the overhead
transmission line.116
115
Exhibit 75: June 29, 2012, Conditional Use Permit Application, Latigo Wind Park, Page 3 of 16 Section IV: Land and Road
Access, Note: Additionally, a of a mile stretch of transmission line is not signed.
116
Exhibit 76: : June 29, 2012, Conditional Use Permit Application, Latigo Wind Park, Page 3 of 16 Section IV: Land and Road
Access, Latigo Wind Park will also obtain encroachment permits from the Utah Department of Transportation (UDOT) for
crossing Highway 191 and Highway 491with the overhead transmission line. and Email from UDOT stating no permits have
been issued.
Page 97 of 116
At the time of the March 25, 2011 submission of the Interconnection Request, no lease
agreement for the easement or purchase agreement for the land need for the transmission line
was in place as required by OATT(IV)(38)(3)(1)(iii). Again, a critical portion, the UDOT
permits have not been obtained. There is not a guarantee that they will be obtained. However,
that left withstanding, even if they are obtained, there is NO provision in the FERC Order 2003,
FERC LGIP or the OATT that allows for Interconnection Capacity to be reserved by an
Interconnection Customer, for years, to the detriment of other ready to go Interconnection
Customers so that the first reserver can sit on the Queue and sort out their site control
concerns. The OATT and FERC Order 2003 do not allow an Interconnection Customer to
reserve capacity and then hope and try to obtain the required permitting later.
5) Page 7 of 16
Latigo Wind Park believes that without the transmission easements there would be no
wind farm
By Latigos own admission, without the transmission easements [for the transmission
line] there would be no windfarm. And they did not have the easements for the transmission line
secured at the time of the submission of their Interconnection Request. In fact, they have at least
three (3) owners who dont want, and did not give permission for the transmission lines to cross
through their property. How PacifiCorp can deem this adequate Site Control is outrageous. The
fact of the matter is, PacifiCorp did not care about the Site Control because this entire
circumstance is a sham for a shill to get the project into the hands of PacifiCorp regardless of
the rules, regardless of the Commission.
The entire Conditional Use Permit Application Summary, Pages 1-16, is attached as Exhibit 77117.
117
Exhibit 77: Entire Copy of the Summary Pg 1-16, of the Latigo Wind Park, Conditional Use Permit Application submitted to
the San Juan County Planning Commission.
Page 98 of 116
The map Latigo submitted to the San Juan County Planning Commission is completely
different from the Interconnection Request Maps. Yet again, these favored PacifiCorp
Interconnection Customers, Blue Mountain BMPP and Latigo each have had material
modifications to their foot prints, because PacifiCorp has made no real effort to vet these
Interconnection Requests. In fact, it is very possible that the permitting may not even include the
land that was represented to PacifiCorp or that PacifiCorp has not properly studied that land that
comprises the true project footprint. See Exhibit 78118 for the Interconnection Request Map and
the County Conditional Use Permit Map for the Latigo Wind Project.
Latigos Interconnection Request should not have been deemed complete by PacifiCorp
and allowed to remain on the queue position and reserve an allocation of valuable
Interconnection Capacity for over a year without initially complying with OATT. No other
project, except for Blue Mountain BMPP has been allowed by PacifiCorp, to reserve
Interconnection Capacity based upon a speculative, incomplete Interconnection Request, and
then use the two (2) year study process to secure their Site Control. Meanwhile, with projects
such as Sage Grouse and Ellis-Hall, PacifiCorp raises the bar standard, higher than that which is
mandated. PacifiCorp lowers the bar, well below and outside the parameters and their discretion
to enable Latigo and Blue Mountain BMPP remain in advantageous positions for the benefit of
PacifiCorps future expansion opportunities. This violates the spirit and the intention of PURPA,
FERC Order 2003 and their OATT.
PacifiCorp has been able to thwart Interconnection Customers from submitting
Interconnection Requests, because Latigo was on the Interconnection Queue reserving a
significant allocation of Interconnection Capacity and maintain a Qualified Facility (QF) status
118
Exhibit 78: Interconnection Request Map of Latigo Wind Park Project sent to PacifiCorp and the Conditional Use Permit Map
of Latigo Wind Park Project submitted to the San Juan County Planning Commission.
Page 99 of 116
which requires other projects seeking the same designation to be at least one (1) mile away.
Latigo was allowed to do this, because it is slated to be purchased by PacifiCorp. The San Juan
County area is a prime rural area for wind farm development for a variety of reasons, including
low population, large tracks of land with few private owners, primarily farming and agricultural
area, and it has been listed several times by Forbes Magazine as the poorest county in Utah.
It is also the furthest south county and the county with the largest geographical area. Its
location is right smack in the middle of an energy corridor that encompasses Colorado, New
Mexico and Arizona and proceeds all the way to the northwestern states of Oregon and
Washington, which is PacifiCorps service area and the area PacifiCorp has targeted for its
expansion plans. PacifiCorp recently performed a multi-million dollar Upgrade to the Pinto
Substation, which is the last, most southern critical substation on PacifiCorps Transmission
System and is the closet critical substation that interties to the Four Corners Substation owned by
Arizona Public Service. Four Corners Substation is 110 line miles from Pinto Substation and
located on the bordering Arizona county of Apache. Four Corners Substation is a critical
substation, that has the unique ability to directly service the Four Corners States, four (4) states
whereby all four corners, the SE corner of Utah (where Pinto is), the SW corner of Colorado, the
NE corner of Arizona and the NW corner of New Mexico all touch and can be serviced by the
Four Corners Generation Facility, a massive thermal facility in New Mexico. Three (3) of these
four (4) states, Arizona, New Mexico, and Colorado, all have legislatively mandated Renewable
Energy Portfolio Standards (RPS). As well, the Four Corners Substation and the Four Corners
Generation Facility have the means to impact Nevada, another state with legislatively mandated
RPS. Utah is the only state in this four corners location that does not have a mandatory RPS.
Berkshire Hathaway Energy (BHE), PacifiCorps parent company, has several officers serving
dual officer positions in both PacifiCorp & BHE, stationed here in Utah.
Utah is the least regulated state of the PacifiCorp service area, and San Juan County has
one of the greatest opportunities for renewable generation, thereby expanding PacifiCorps
vertical integration model. BHE recently acquired NV Energy, the renamed entity of the Sierra
Pacific and Nevada Power merger, now the largest utility in Nevada, serving approximately
(90%) of the state. This area in the Four Corners Region looks to hold very promising expansion
opportunities as well. In addition, California too, has lines that intertie into the Four Corners
Substation. It appears that San Juan County has the greatest opportunity for renewable
generation and expansion with a critical substation, Pinto Substation, that interties into the other
utility system. PacifiCorp has acquired a primary transmission line connecting New Mexico to
the eastern boundaries of San Juan County and another primary transmission line connecting into
Arizona. Therefore, the Pinto Substation and the nearly 15,000 available private acres of
potential generation capacity are of significant importance to PacifiCorp and its vertical
integration expansion opportunities. It is important to note to the Commission, that almost 1/3 of
the most viable land in this energy corridor belongs to the Roring Family, whose Lease
Agreements (which were once held by PacifiCorp) are now held by Ellis-Hall Consultants, and
under contract to Sage Grouse. All the proposed wind farms with executed Interconnection
Agreements Latigo, Blue Mountain BMPP, and Ellis-Hall fall within this 15,000 acres area and
all of these projects are slated to be QFs. 119 Ellis-Hall is developing a wind farm on the Roring
land yet is experiencing great opposition from PacifiCorp, an entity that should be neutral in
the dealings with all Interconnection Customers. That simply is not the case. Sage Grouse seeks
119
Exhibit 79: Map of all three (3) proposed San Juan County Wind Farm projects with executed Interconnection agreements. and Sage
Grouses Project
term goal is to facilitate the monopolistic control of their vertical integrated expansion
opportunities and to successfully maintain the monopoly stranglehold they command in the
western and northwestern United States, they must get rid of the only wind farm developer able
to effectively build a wind farm from its own resources. That would be Ellis-Hall. Yet despite
three (3) orchestrated attempts to remove Ellis-Hall from the queue for cause Ellis-Hall has
had to overcome these last minute hurdles, at least at an Interconnection level; Ellis-Hall is still
waiting to execute a PPA with PacifiCorp.
Ellis-Halls fate is of significance to Sage Grouse because Sage Grouse is interconnecting
through Ellis-Halls substation. This is a requirement of OATT because the projects are too
close together. This is why the issues and concerns of Ellis-Hall and its treatment are referenced
and discussed in this Sage Grouse Complaint against PacifiCorp.
PacifiCorp is not interested in sharing or allowing open access to an Interconnection
Customer such as Ellis-Hall, an entity with a clear directive to construct the project and not
flip it. The largest principal of the company procured, constructed and operates a privately and
wholly owned wind farm that maintains an efficiency rating of 42%. Sage Grouse has refused
to capitulate and sell or allow for a planned Step-In of its project by PacifiCorp. Both Latigo and
Blue Mountain BMPP are slated to be purchased by PacifiCorp, as has been the plan from the
inception. Both have represented that they are currently in negotiations with PacifiCorp.
PacifiCorp has already seized control of another shill Wind Farm Project developed by
Wasatch Wind (owner of Latigo), the Spanish Fork Wind Park 2 Wind Farm120. All of these
120
Exhibit 80: Schedule G Executory Contracts and Unexpired Leases of Bankruptcy Case No. 12-49219, Document #498,
page 113 of 143 and page 124 of 143. PacifiCorp Energy (the non-regulated generation division of PacifiCorp is a secured
creditor in this bankruptcy case. The Debtor, the party that owned Spanish Fork Wind Park 2, has reached a Settlement
Agreement with PacifiCorp. There is a Settlement Agreement (ID: 05697) which for both PacifiCorp, #676 on page 113
and Spanish Fork Wind Park 2, LLC #799 on page 124. Sage Grouse contacted PacifiCorp and asked if the Settlement was
the ownership of Spanish Fork Wind Park 2, LLC being turned over to PacifiCorp in order to settle the debt, and if
PacifiCorp released all claims. PacifiCorp responded aggressively. We arent going to tell you that! Call Doug Cannon if
generation facilities or proposed generation facilities are strategically located along the path that
lead to the newly constructed Current Creek Power Station owned entirely by PacifiCorp.
PacifiCorp is currently in negotiations with Latigo because several of the Options to Purchase the
land in the project expire February 12, 2015 and Latigo does not appear to have exercised the
purchase options. In order for PacifiCorp to maintain control of those lands, it appears they must
purchase the project, and that is one of the reasons why Latigo has been allowed to remain on the
Interconnection Queue, without Site Control, for so long because they only recently, (after
having been on the Queue for almost two (2) years with 60 MW of Interconnection Capacity
allocated to them) in February 12, 2013secured the Options to Purchase that land. In addition,
Latigo was allowed to retain its higher Queue Position without:
1) Executing an LGIA within the required sixty (60) days pursuant to OATT (IV)(46):
OATT (IV)(46)(2) Negotiation:
Transmission Provider and Interconnection Customer shall negotiate concerning any
disputed provisions of the appendices to the draft LGIA for not more than sixty (60)
Calendar Days after tender of the final Interconnection Facilities Study Report.
2) Requesting the submission of the unexecuted LGIA to the Commission:
OATT (IV)(46)(2) Negotiation:
request termination of the negotiations at any time after tender of the draft
LGIA pursuant to Section 46.1 and request submission of the unexecuted LGIA with
FERC.
3) Initiate dispute resolution procedures.
The OATT (IV)(46)(2) requires that:
you want to know so bad! Sage Grouse received a very harsh response from PacifiCorp in what was a fairly simple
question, since PacifiCorp purports to identify on its website its percentage of ownership in and location of its generation
facilities, both carbon emitting and carbon free. When the bankruptcy document management entity was contacted in
an effort to secure the actual Settlement Agreement, they advised that although many documents are available and
they are able to provide them, that particular document is falls under a confidentiality disclosure agreement and
cannot be provided. Once again, the cloak of confidentiality is being invoked by PacifiCorp to stifle and type of
accountability and truthfulness.
Latigo, Latigo would have long sense been deemed withdrawn from the LGIA Queue,
and the Interconnection Capacity that has been allocated to it, would have been available
to the next project, Queue #420, Ellis-Hall Consultants.
Latigo was allowed to retain its higher Queue Position without:
B) agreeing to not negotiate, so that despite the LGIP Study Process being deemed
complete, and finished with the issuance and acceptance of the Final Facilities Study,
Latigo is allowed to remain on the LGIA Queue, undisturbed, patiently using the time to
secure the requisite Site Control they failed to demonstrate as required by OATT
(IV)(38)(3)(1)(iii) their March 25, 2011 submission.
C) if the OATT had been applied to Latigo as it has with other non favored PacifiCorp
Interconnection Customers, then Latigo most likely would have had to execute an LGIA
and suspend it in 2012. As such the clock for the three (3) year suspension would have
begun and in 2015, the project would have been in jeopardy for being withdrawn for lack
of progress. However, Latigo was allowed to remain, active on the Interconnection
Queue, without an LGIA for almost two (2) years. An inquiry was made to PacifiCorp as
to why there was not a notation (as is required by OATT and is the case with other
Interconnection Customers) as to why Latigo was allowed to remain sooooo long on the
Interconnection Queue. A notation was never posted. 121 PacifiCorp stated
confidentiality and failed to reply.
121
Exhibit 2: July 24, 2013 printout of the entire OASIS Queue. No notations of more info or the like appear by
Queue #384.
OATT (IV)(46)(2) states if the Interconnection Customer has not executed the LGIA,
requested filing of an unexecuted LGIA, or initiated Dispute Resolution procedures pursuant to
Section 48.5 within sixty (60) Calendar Days of tender of draft LGIA, it shall be deemed to
have withdrawn its Interconnection Request. Transmission Provider shall provide to
Interconnection Customer a final LGIA within fifteen (15) Business Days after the completion of
the negotiation process. PacifiCorp never deemed withdrawn the Latigo Interconnection
Request, and never submitted a final LGIA (as required). Sage Grouse inquired about this,
because of the allocation of the valuable Interconnection Capacity to Latigo and PacifiCorp
continued to state that they had no obligation to disclose anything about another project and
actually went as far as to say though, in fact an LGIA had been filed with the Commission. To
date, Sage Grouse has been unable to locate said filing.
When the Commission approved the verbiage Unless otherwise agreed by the Parties
it had no way of anticipating that PacifiCorp would collaborate with Interconnection Customers
it deems favorable to its vertical integration expansion opportunities and use that verbiage as a
sword against other Interconnection Customers such Sage Grouse.
PacifiCorp absolutely knew that this wind turbine is no longer being manufactured. Most
any party or entity in the wind industry is familiar with the First Wind Energy, LLC (First
Wind) lawsuit against Clipper Windpower, LLC (Clipper Turbines). First Wind alleged that
Clipper accepted $59.5 million dollars in advanced payments for wind turbines, that First Wind
claims Clipper Turbines no longer manufacturers. First Wind filed suit against Clipper Turbines
October 2, 2012, Case No. 06571 EQCV 076 808 in Linn County, Iowa.
122
Exhibit 81: August 9, 2013, Cover page, Pg vii of Table of Contents, & First pg of Appendix C identifying 24 Clipper Liberty
Series 2.5 MW wind turbine generators, (Clipper Windpower ceased manufacture of the Clipper Liberty Series Turbines in or
about May 2012, over 1 years prior to the execution of this document) from the Standard Large Generator Interconnection
Agreement for A Qualifying Facility (QFLGIA) btwn PacifiCorp & Latigo Wind Park, LLC, Queue #0384; Email from Clipper Wind
Power identifying they are no longer manufacturing the Clipper Liberty Series wind turbine; Clipper Articles from Newspapers,
the Library & the Internet; Study Report pages from Queue No.s #135, 136, 137 identifying Clipper Liberty wind turbines, each
Queue had an executed Interconnection Agreement that PacifiCorp TERMINATED 08 Nov 2012 because the Clipper Liberty wind
turbine is NO LONG being manufactured; Item 1.0 of FINAL Latigo Wind Park, Queue No.0384 identifying the project wind
turbine is identifying 24 Clipper Liberty Series 2.5 MW wind turbine generators. No new studies have been commenced with
a different wind turbine.
This is significant because in late 2012 (November), after the lawsuits against Clipper
began, any Interconnection Agreement for a project WITH A CLIPPER WIND TURBINE
that was not operational, PacifiCorp deactivated or TERMINATED. EVERY Interconnection
Agreement (LGIA) on its Interconnection Queue that that used a Clipper Turbine including
three (3) executed Interconnection Agreements for Clipper Windpower Projects, Queue #135,
Queue #136 and Queue #137 were terminated, post the First Wind Lawsuit. Other deactivations
or terminations with Clipper Turbines include Queue #140, a withdrawal for Queue #215 and so
on. Sage Grouse attempted to provide the Commission with ALL of the Queue No. however, the
OASIS site gives a Series 404 error123 item unavailable for the LGIP Studies for at well over
108 Queue Positions. Nevertheless, PacifiCorp knew as early as May 2012 that the Clipper
Turbines were not being manufactured.
The Latigo Project, Queue #384, identifies 24 Clipper Liberty Series 2.5 wind turbine
generators in its Final Facility Study issued in March 16, 2012. Any other Interconnection
Customer would have been required to re-study with another wind turbine. In fact, PacifiCorp
required Ellis-Hall to change its wind turbine during its System Impact Study, because of a
reported software communication concern and threaten to withdraw Ellis-Hall from the
Interconnection Queue if they could not affect the change and secure the required PSS/E data for
the models and Appendix 1 information almost immediately. Upon information and belief, the
same Gamesa Turbine is operational on PacifiCorps transmission system in Idaho. PacifiCorp
stated that Ellis-Hall cannot use the Gamesa wind turbine due to a software communication
concern that presents itself in stochastic modeling. However, Blue Mountain BMPP, after
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PacifiCorp was asked about this very circumstance in 2012, 2013, and again in 2014. Each time stating it is just
a computer glitch from our transferring of files, it will be resolved right away. To date, many of the LGIP Study
results still have not been posted, thereby impeding the usefulness of the OASIS Queue as a reporting information
mechanism.
learning about the Gamesa turbines, changed its turbine to Gamesa and PacifiCorp allowed Blue
Mountain BMPP to execute a PPA using the Gamesa wind turbine and executed its LGIA using
the Gamesa wind turbine.
Latigo is allowed to execute an Interconnection Agreement with a wind turbine that has
not been manufactured for at least 1 years prior to the execution? PacifiCorp did not care
about the impacts of the Latigo wind turbine on the PacifiCorp Transmission System because
PacifiCorp is going to purchase the project and use whatever wind turbine it wants. The entire
process of executing the LGIA was a sham to give the appearance of regulatory compliance.
Latigo had plenty of time to re-study, however, since the purchase was in the works from the
very beginning, such details as executing an Interconnection Agreement inclusive of a wind
turbine that is actually being manufactured and can actually generate power seems not to be a
necessary component for a favored PacifiCorp Interconnection Customer.
2) Latigo included parcels of land in its project (back to the Site Control issues) whereby
the owners of the land had no knowledge of their lands inclusion in Latigos project. Latigo is
running its own transmission cable from its collector substation to the Point of Interconnection,
Pinto Substation. The transmission cable is 4.5 miles +/-. PacifiCorp performed a crucial
Dynamic Stability Study, which it issued Sept. 21, 2011. Latigo accepted the results of the
Dynamic Stability Study. Latigo did not have permission to cross the land, secured easements,
from the land owners, several of whom had absolutely no idea there was a transmission line
slated to cross their land. Included with these land owners, is Corinne N. Roring, who has
contracted the developmental rights to that land to Sage Grouse. Neither Sage Grouse nor Mrs.
Roring authorized Latigo to use that land. This takes the Commission right back to the
fundamental basics of Site Control. An entity cannot merely include a person(s) land in their
project, because it is convenient and not seek the owners permission, timely. Such action is a
fundamental violation of land rights, personal ownership rights. However, in this situation, the
rights of the land owners was immaterial to PacifiCorp, a $35 billion dollar entity, because once
PacifiCorp purchases the project from Latigo, if the land owners did not capitulate, PacifiCorp
always has the right of eminent domain. San Juan County is the poorest County in the state of
Utah. It has the highest unemployment. The only asset many people have is their land. None of
these land owners can wage a battle over land rights with PacifiCorp. Nevertheless Site Control
is a non-issue for the Latigo Project, as the primary goal appears to be the appearance of
regulatory compliance not actual compliance as evidenced by just these few examples.
PacifiCorp is going to do whatever it wants to do once it controls the project.
Other land owners who had no idea their land was slated to have a transmission cable
cross it include Guy and Ginger Tracy, owners of Parcel No. A33240309002, Sandy and Gail
Johnson, owners of Parcel No. A33240309000, Corinne Nielson Roring, Trustee, Parcel No.
33S23E249000. These land owners discovered their land was included in the Latigo project at
various times and sent a letter advising PacifiCorp that they had not authorized its use. This was
well after the required Dynamic Stability Study, the System Impact Study, and the Final
Facilities Study had been completed. This land was inclusive as the subject land in these studies,
resulting in a transmission line 4.5 miles +/- to Pinto Substation. PacifiCorp did not respond to
the land owners. Upon information and belief, PacifiCorp contacted Latigo, and well after the
LGIP Studies had been completed in 2013, right before the LGIA execution, PacifiCorp allowed
Latigo to change the entire route of transmission line, resulting in a longer transmission line, at
4.9 miles +/-. This new line (in red) on the map has not been studied and has been incorporated
as if the differences between the two (2) lines are inconsequential. Latigo did not provide a map
with Parcel Numbers, or the names of the land owners or anything to indicate that there was an
easement in place on the property. In sharp contrast, PacifiCorp required Sage Grouse to provide
a map with the parcel numbers its transmission cable passes through, as well as a letter from the
owner of the parcels of land specifically acknowledging that they have authorized the use of their
land. Included in Exhibit 82124 is the Latigo map submitted with their invalid Interconnection
Request inclusive of the yellow transmission cable whereby all the land owners had not
authorized the easement; an enlargement of the location of the Tracys land and the Johnsons
land with Latigos transmission line crossing it with a yellow transmission line and a map of the
old (yellow) transmission line for Latigo which is the basis for all of the studies performed (that
and the Clipper Liberty wind turbine which is not being manufactured); copies of the letters sent
to PacifiCorp by some of the affected land owners and a map with the new longer, unstudied
transmission cable (in red); and the final map has the both the Interconnection Map and the
County Conditional Use Permit map, combined.
3) The Latigo Interconnection Request Map identifies the wind turbine layout and the
location of the transmission cable to the Point of Interconnection, Pinto Substation. It also
identifies the area of the location of the wind farm, and the collector substation. The turbine
impedances will be based upon this map. Therefore the LGIP Studies are all based upon this
map. All of Latigos changes thus far (and this is not all of them), PacifiCorp has refused to
characterize as material modification, because a material modification will require a new
Interconnection Request. Should Sage Grouse make said changes, they would be material.
However, when asked what they are considered for Latigo, and how these changes affect the
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Exhibit 82: Latigo Interconnection Request Map (yellow transmission line); Map of Latigo Interconnection
Request with the Parcels identified; enlargement of the parcels owned by Sandy & Gail Johnson, Parcel No.
A33240309000 and Guy & Ginger Tracy, Parcel No. A33240309002 identifying the Latigo Transmission Line crosses
their land to get to the Point of Interconnection for the project, Pinto Substation.
allocation of Interconnection Capacity, PacifiCorp stated that these are not material
modifications they are merely minor adjustments. It seems highly illogical that PacifiCorp
would be executing an Interconnection Agreement for a wind turbine that no longer exists, when
its known throughout the industry that it no longer is being manufactured is hardly a minor
adjustment and to date a legitimate wind turbine has not been selected or restudied.
4) The Latigo Conditional Use Permit Map is a completely different footprint with a
completely different wind turbine layout that has not been studied by the LGIP Study Process.
The transmission line is longer, and it has not been assessed. It is not known whether each
entity, the San Juan County Planning Commission and/or PacifiCorp are aware that two (2)
separate maps have been submitted with different footprints and layouts to each entity.
In addition to the Preamble, including the Basis for Fast Track Processing
Request and the contents of the entire Complaint, Sage Grouse Energy Project requests the
Commission review and respond within its authority regarding the concerns and issues that arise
not only from the violations of the FERC Orders, and PacifiCorps OATT, Site Control, and the
implementation series of schemes to the benefit of PacifiCorps vertical integration expansion
objectives, including numerous tangential schemes. Sage Grouse has uncovered significant
evidence that requires further investigation from the Commission and appropriate authorities;
PacifiCorp, PacifiCorp (Transmission Services) and PacifiCorp Energy have not and clearly do
not maintain the requisite corporate separation, but have colluded to further favored projects,
such as Blue Mountain Power Partners, LLC and Latigo Wind Park, LLC; PacifiCorp has not
required these projects to follow the FERC Orders and PacifiCorps Tariffs, as required, and as
the agency that polices itself for required compliance, PacifiCorp has clearly demonstrated that it
is impossible to allow this type of power and control remain in PacifiCorps hand when in fact
they are not only a direct competitor of other Interconnection Customers, but also stand to gain
when unfavored, competitive Interconnection Customers are prevented from securing Open
Access to its Transmission System. In addition to the actions the Commission takes to remedy
the Sage Grouse Energy Project, PacifiCorp should be sanctioned for its actions and its
collaborative efforts.
(e) [Reserved]
(2) THE COMMISSION MAY ISSUE AN ORDER ON THE MERITS BASED UPON
THE PLEADINGS;
Page 114 of 116
(h) FAST TRACK PROCESSING. (1) THE COMMISSION MAY RESOLVE COMPLAINTS
USING FAST TRACK PROCEDURES IF THE COMPLAINT REQUIRED EXPEDITIOUS
RESOLUTION. FAST TRACK PROCEDURES MAY INCLUDE EXPEDITED ACTION ON
THE PLEADINGS BY THE COMMISSION, EXPEDITED HEARING BEFORE AN ALJ, OR
EXPEDITED ACTION ON REQUESTS FOR STAY, EXTENSION OF TIME, OR OTHER
RELIEF BY THE COMMISSION OR AN ALJ.
(2) A COMPLAINANT MAY REQUEST FAST TRACK PROCESSING OF A COMPLAINT
BY INCLUDING SUCH A REQUEST IN ITS COMPLAINT, CAPTIONING THE
COMPLAINT IN BOLD TYPEFACE COMPLAINT REQUESTING FAST TRACK
PROCESSING, AND EXPLAINING WHY EXPEDITION IS NECESSARY AS REQUIRED
BY SECTION 385.206(b)(11).
(3) BASED ON ASSESSMENT OF THE NEED FOR EXPEDIAITON, THE PERIOD FOR
FILING ANSWERS, INTERVENTIONS AND COMMENTS TO A COMPLAINT
REQUESTING FAST TRACK PROCESSING MAY BE SHORTENED BY THE
COMMISSION FROM THE TIME PROVIDED IN 385.206(f).
(4) AFTER THE ANSWER IS FILED, THE COMMISSION WILL ISSUE PROMPTLY AN
ORDER SPECIFYING THE PROCEDURE AND ANY SCHEDULE TO BE FOLLOWED.
(i) A STATEMENT SETTING FORTH WHEN AND HOW THE COMPLAINT WAS
SATISFIED; AND