Susan Wilson was a 25-year veteran of the North Carolina Department of Environment and Natural Resources, but she'd had enough of her new boss and his "Republican agenda" which de-emphasizes regulation, sharply reduces the role of regulators, and strips them of employee rights:
More than 100 state environmental regulators who will implement upcoming legislative decisions on natural gas drilling, offshore oil exploration and changes to air and water quality rules will soon do so as “exempt” employees who can be fired without cause or appeal.
A legislative change to the State Personnel Act in 2012 gave Gov. Pat McCrory the ability to designate 1,000 so-called "exempt positions" throughout his cabinet departments, more than any governor in a quarter-century.
An analysis by WRAL News shows that these re-designated workers are disproportionately concentrated within the hierarchy of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources, where McCrory will soon strip employment protections from about 150 directors and managers.
Furthermore, they didn't have a regulation problem, they had a customer service problem:
In the three years since Republicans took control of the legislature, lawmakers have slashed the agency's budget by more than 40 percent and moved entire divisions out from the DENR organization chart.
When he sat down with WRAL News in January, incoming DENR Secretary John Skvarla said one of his first missions was to repair a relationship with lawmakers that was "more adversarial than it's needed to be." With a change in approach, he said, it was possible for his department to work more effectively with businesses and developers and protect the environment at the same time.
"Maybe it's not the regulations. Maybe it's the way, internally at DENR, they handle permittees," Skvarla said. "Maybe with a more customer service environment, the regulations stay the same and everybody is happy because they've worked together to try to accomplish the same thing. That's my goal."
After a her new boss sent a note on Labor Day reminding employees their new role should focus on customer service, Wilson decided to walk. And she wasn't going
quietly:
In response to a Labor Day weekend note from Environment and Natural Resources Secretary John Skvarla, Wilson sharply criticized his new direction for the agency, which Skvarla has said should be focused on customer service.
"Between your inappropriate mission statement, the dismantling of the Division of Water Quality, and HB74 (along with a few other gems from this session's NCGA), I see no reason to continue here – because my own mission – to assist all citizens and protect those that don't have a voice, would be compromised," Wilson, who worked as a water quality regulator based in Asheville, wrote.
Her full letter and the accompanying video:
Dear John,
Thanks so much for the note regarding Labor Day - you have always been timely with these, unlike some of your predecessors.
You and I are going to part ways today. I had a great "gig" here in the regional office - I had a great boss, great co-workers, I was still learning a good bit, and the good days were always outweighing the bad days. I was pretty certain (after my first 5 years) that I could outlast any administration the governor could appoint. I had no problem with the Martin administration - he was a man of science and no extremist.
Between your inappropriate mission statement, the dismantling of the Division of Water Quality, and HB74 (along with a few other gems from this session's NCGA), I see no reason to continue here - because my own mission - to assist all citizens and protect those that don't have a voice, would be compromised.
I was a good regulator - I had a bit of distrust for both sides of the aisle - which made me regulate evenly and with common sense and fair judgment. Over the past 24 years I've had the privilege to have worked with some of the most intelligent, articulate, and respected environmental scientists and engineers - I'd put them up against my friends in the private sector any day of the week. But the disdain for them (and me) by this administration is too much to bear.
When you pushed our reasonable, right-leaning WQ Director out, I knew we were in trouble. When you guys (and they are mostly guys...) pushed out a very thoughtful and judicial Environmental Management Commission chair, I knew we were moving into a sand pit that we weren't going to dig out of easily. When you, along with your "great Tom Reeder", decided to cleave off the stormwater programs and move it to Land Resources, who have never been trained for such..nor do they much care about WQ, I knew it was time to leave. I'm sure the 401 Water Quality program is next (especially since you said we should be more like TX and SC).
I'm all about customer service (as the majority of employees in DWQ are, and have always been), but that just seems to be a smokescreen for a very extremist republican agenda.
Likely there will be some uptick in the business environment in the next few years (mainly because the economy has started to recover from the disaster your friends on Wall Street created). But when the hot summers and the drought years come back, and we get fish kills again, and maybe there's fracking going on in the sandhills - it will be the fine folks at DENR who will get blamed for the chaos. The politicians and their appointees, that did the dismantling and created the chaos, will be long gone. We know the drill.
For my brothers and sisters in the Division of WATER QUALITY (the so called "seat warmers") who don't have the option to be able to move on, due to various obligations and a destroyed economy, let me leave you with a video I pilfered from the internet 'cause I didn't have the tools to make my own.
You can view this while I gather up my toothbrush and grab my loincloth to start heading out the door.
Thanks,
Susan