Filed last summer against 97
companies claiming they violated permitting law and had to pay unspecified
damages that could reach into the billions of dollars, at the outset its
ringleaders openly
admitted they saw these oil producers as fatted calves to be slaughtered in
order to increase vastly the revenues and spending of their agency, even if
their choices seemed outside the scope of their agency’s authority, had no coordination
with, or even countered the state’s overall master plan for coastal
restoration. Insulated from accountability to taxpayers, this clique blindly
asserted that this action was necessary for coastal restoration, and rigged the
contract to shunt as much as a third of recovery to go to lawyers it hired and it
put in a poison pill provision that meant a huge payday to them even if it chose
to drop the suit – a clear breach of fiduciary duty to taxpayers.
In response, SB
469 was passed this session in the Legislature to allow only entities under
the state’s Coastal Resources Management Act to bring legal claims involving
allegations about permits in coastal areas. Those agencies would be the state,
the secretary of the Department of Natural Resources, the attorney general,
parish governments with coastal management plans, and the local district
attorneys for parishes without a plan.