NYC Mayor’s Chief of Staff Will Keep a Public Board Seat With Possible Conflict - BNN

Gunnar Larson g at xny.io
Sun Dec 18 05:22:46 PST 2022


https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-12-13/nyc-mayor-eric-adams-chief-of-staff-camille-varlack-will-keep-public-board-seat


POLITICS
News Wire
NYC Mayor’s Chief of Staff Will Keep a Public Board Seat With Possible
Conflict
Gregory Korte, Bloomberg News

Dec 13, 2022

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(Bloomberg) -- The incoming chief of staff to New York City Mayor Eric
Adams serves on the board of a publicly owned energy company that does
business with the city, a role she plans to keep despite a conflict of
interest policy that generally prohibits the practice.

Adams announced last week that he was promoting adviser Camille Varlack to
chief of staff, replacing Frank Carone, who made $252,000 a year in this
role and will be leaving in January.

Varlack, 46, was appointed in August to the board of Avangrid Inc., a
Connecticut-based energy company and the parent company of New York State
Electric & Gas, which has a $5.2 million no-bid contract to provide the
city with electricity.

New York’s city charter prohibits city officials from having “an interest
in a firm which such public servant knows is engaged in business dealings
with the agency served by such public servant.” Employees can secure a
waiver from the city’s Conflicts of Interest Board. The board said it could
not disclose if the mayor’s office asked for a waiver but that no such
request has been granted.

A city spokesman said Varlack will stay on the board and that both
positions were far removed from any direct involvement with overlapping
issues. He said Varlack has not been paid her $140,000 annual salary by
Avangrid since she was hired by the mayor as a senior adviser Oct. 31.

“Her board position has no intersection with her work for the city and
would in no way have any influence over city business,” said Fabien Levy,
the mayor’s press secretary. “Camille has already reported her work on the
board of Avangrid and we have been consulting with COIB to ensure full
compliance with all rules and guidance.”

Avangrid and Varlack didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Close Scrutiny

Varlack is the latest Adams hire to draw scrutiny over conflicts of
interest issues.

The law firm of her predecessor, Carone, had at least 40 clients with
business before city government, according to Politico. He resigned from
the board of Hanover Bank after Adams was elected. Adams also came under
criticism for trying to pay his brother a six-figure salary to help run his
security detail, but COIB ended up granting his brother a waiver to serve
as the mayor’s security consultant for $1 a year.

Read More: NYC Mayor’s Top Aide Subpoenaed as Witness in Racketeering Suit

Ethics experts and good government groups say the city’s ethics agency
should give Varlack’s board role close scrutiny given the mayor’s oversight
and influence over city contracts.

“When you’re the chief of staff to the mayor, the agency is basically the
whole city. She has the potential to influence decisions,” said Richard
Briffault, a Columbia Law School professor who served as chairman of the
city’s Conflicts of Interest Board from 2014 to 2020. “She obviously has
some kind of stake in the success of the company.”

The city departments most likely to deal with NYSEG — the Department of
Environmental Protection and the Department of Citywide Administrative
Services — report to the mayor through the first deputy mayor, a position
often seen as equal rank to the chief of staff, the mayor’s office said.
Adams announced last week that Sheena Wright would fill that role in
January.

Avangrid, formerly known as Iberdrola USA, owns eight public utilities in
the northeastern US through its Avangrid Networks subsidiary.

“Avangrid is a very politically active company in New York State,” said
John Kaehny, the executive director of the watchdog group Reinvent Albany.
The company and its political action committees gave $21,000 to the
campaign of New York Governor Kathy Hochul last year, and thousands more to
state legislators.

The company also disclosed that it spent at least $40,000 last year to
lobby state government, mostly in an effort to win a state contract to
bring clean power to New York City.

Varlack is well known to Kaehny and other state ethics watchers. She served
as the chairwoman of the Joint Commission on Public Ethics before resigning
six months into her tenure in 2021.

“We congratulate Camille Varlack and hope she leaves the board of Avangrid
before she becomes chief of staff to the mayor,” Kaehny said. “Being chief
of staff to the mayor of New York is an incredible honor and responsibility
and should be free of real or perceived conflict of interest.”

(Updates with mayor’s office saying Varlack will not be paid by Avangrid
during her service as chief of staff. A previous version corrected a
statement from the city’s Conflicts of Interest Board.)

©2022 Bloomberg L.P.
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