Fox in the hen house: bp exec at mms

Fox in the hen house: bp exec at mms

Play all audios:

Loading...

Get your news from a source that’s not owned and controlled by oligarchs. Sign up for the free _Mother Jones Daily_. In the weeks since BP’s Deepwater Horizon well started spewing into the


Gulf of Mexico, there’s been increasing attention to the “cozy” relationship between the Minerals Management Service (MMS) and the oil industry it’s supposed to regulate. How cozy? Just last


summer the Obama administration tapped a BP executive to serve as a deputy administrator for land and minerals management. Interior Secretary Ken Salazar last June appointed Sylvia V. Baca


to the post, which did not require Senate confirmation. The appointment follows eight years at BP. From her MMS bio: > Baca had been general manager for Social Investment Programs and


> Strategic Partnerships at BP America Inc. in Houston, and had held > several senior management positions with the company since 2001, > focusing on environmental initiatives, 


overseeing cooperative > projects with private and public organizations, developing health, > safety, and emergency response programs and working on climate > change, biodiversity 


and sustainability objectives. > As Director of Global Health, Safety, Environment & Emergency > Response for BP Shipping Ltd. in London, Baca led a worldwide team > to develop 


innovative and proactive energy and the environment > initiatives. Among her accomplishments, she oversaw health, safety > and environmental outcomes for an $8 billion ship building 


program, > resulting in the youngest, greenest and most technically advanced > fleet in the world. The project has received numerous awards for its > safety and environmental 


advancements. Baca is also an excellent example of the revolving door between government and industry that MMS has been accused of facilitating. From 1995 to 2001, she was an assistant


secretary for land and minerals management at the Department of Interior before leaving to work for the oil giant. Last week, Salazar unveiled plans to split MMS into three agencies—one that


will focus on energy development, another on enforcement and the third on revenue collection. But that doesn’t necessarily stop the spinning door between the beleaguered agency and the oil


industry. UPDATE: Salazar spokesperson Kendra Barkoff issued a statement noting that Baca, under federal government ethics standards, “has been and is recused from participating personally


and substantially in any particular matter involving specific parties in which BP is or represents a party, for a period of two years following her appointment.” She also noted that Baca is


not working on offshore drilling at the agency (her post deals with on-shore drilling). Her appointment to the agency, however, doesn’t do much to help its industry-friendly reputation.