Posts Tagged 'California AG Lawsuit'

And then there were six: NRDC files lawsuit against the FHFA

Building off of yesterday’s announcement from Palm Desert that, today the NRDC filed its own complaint against the FHFA in federal district court in NY.  That brings the total to, by my count, six lawsuits underway:

  1. Sierra Club
  2. Sonoma County
  3. Palm Desert
  4. California Attorney General’s Office
  5. Town of Babylon
  6. NRDC

The full press release is below, and is available on NRDC’s website here: http://www.nrdc.org/media/2010/101006.asp

And the complaint is here: http://docs.nrdc.org/energy/files/ene_10100601a.pdf

***Full text of press release***

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Press contact: Kate Slusark, 212-727-4592
If you are not a member of the press, please write to us at nrdcinfo@nrdc.org or see our contact page
NRDC Sues Federal Housing Regulators for Blocking Affordable Clean Energy Projects for Homeowners

NEW YORK, N.Y. (October 6, 2010) – Federal housing regulators must stop obstructing programs that make energy efficiency upgrades and renewable energy projects affordable for American homeowners, according to a lawsuit filed today by the Natural Resources Defense Council.

“Federal housing regulators are standing in the way of programs that make clean energy projects affordable for homeowners and lower electricity bills,” said Katherine Kennedy, Energy Counsel at NRDC. “It defies common sense that the federal government is blocking programs that could create jobs, jumpstart our economy, put money in homeowners’ pockets, and fight climate change at the same time. Instead of shutting them down, the federal government should help these programs grow.”

NRDC filed the lawsuit in federal district court in the Southern District of New York against the Federal Housing Finance Agency, which regulates government sponsored mortgage buyers Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, which regulates national banks. The agencies have halted clean energy financing programs—called Property Assessed Clean Energy (PACE) programs— that are already off the ground in California, Colorado and New York, and have been adopted in 20 other states and the District of Columbia.

With PACE programs, the upfront costs of property owners’ clean energy projects are financed by municipalities. Homeowners then pay off the projects as an incremental charge on their property taxes over an extended period of up to 20 years – with the savings on their energy bills often exceeding the costs of the payments from the start. The program is entirely voluntary and easily transferable to the next property owner if the current resident decides to move. It can be used to fund anything from small-scale renewable energy systems, like solar panels, to energy efficiency upgrades, like better windows, insulation, or heating and cooling systems.

The Obama Administration has supported PACE programs in the past, with the Department of Energy awarding more than $150 million in federal stimulus funds to support them last year. But federal housing regulators have since halted the programs nationwide through a backdoor administrative action. In July, FHFA and OCC issued statements to Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the national banks that effectively halted PACE efficiency programs nationwide. The result has been a freeze on nearly all existing and planned PACE programs, leaving millions of dollars in federal stimulus funds in question, and thousands of jobs implementing the projects in limbo, in addition to putting climate change goals and economic development plans across the country on hold.

NRDC is suing the agencies for halting the programs without justification, and for doing so without following the proper protocol as required by law. This includes failing to conduct a review of the environmental impacts and to provide the public an opportunity to comment before taking this action.

“Financing is a key barrier for property owners who are interested in lowering their bills with clean energy improvements,” said Greg Hale, Senior Finance Specialist at NRDC’s Center for Market Innovation. “PACE programs provide a unique solution – allowing them to overcome this roadblock without relying on public dollars, and with virtually no risk to existing lenders. In fact, with PACE programs, clean energy improvements can reduce the risk of mortgage default by lowering energy bills and increasing property values.”

In California, Attorney General Jerry Brown, Sonoma County, the City of Palm Desert and the Sierra Club have filed similar federal lawsuits. U.S. Senator Barbara Boxer and U.S. Representative Mike Thompson have also introduced federal legislation that would require the federal government to allow states and localities to move forward with PACE programs.

New York State is one of the 23 states that have enacted PACE legislation, and the state received $40 million of the DOE’s stimulus funds for PACE energy efficiency programs. In New York, at least 24 communities and three counties have implemented or are considering PACE programs, including New York City, Babylon, Bedford, Binghamton, Ithaca, Nassau County, Albany County and Tompkins County.

The full complaint can be found online here: http://docs.nrdc.org/energy/files/ene_10100601a.pdf.

The Natural Resources Defense Council is a national, nonprofit organization of scientists, lawyers and environmental specialists dedicated to protecting public health and the environment. Founded in 1970, NRDC has 1.3 million members and online activists, served from offices in New York, Washington, Chicago, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Beijing.

Palm Desert sues, too

City of Palm Desert

Who said fall wasn’t fun?  Palm Desert throws a lawsuit in the ring alongside Sonoma, Bablyon, California AG, and Sierra Club to protect its local program and turn up the heat on the FHFA. See, ye old doubters, we’re back into a good news cycle with PACE after all…

See article from local paper here:

And full text of the press release here (thanks for the heads-up, Ken! Sorry I’m just now getting to this):

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                                         CONTACT: David Hermann

760-776-6411

PALM DESERT SUES TO PROTECT ENERGY EFFICIENCY PROGRAM

PALM DESERT, CA (October 4, 2010) – The City of Palm Desert today filed a lawsuit in federal court in San Francisco to protect a wide-ranging city energy efficiency program. The Palm Desert Energy Independence Program, adopted in 2008, provides financing for property owners to install solar panels and other energy saving devices and systems. Funds advanced by the City are repaid by assessments on the property over a period up to 20 years.

The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) has undermined the Palm Desert program and others like it by prohibiting home mortgages with energy assessments from being acquired by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the two federal agencies which purchase or guarantee most residential mortgages in the country. The FHFA regulation, announced in July 2010, has effectively shut down the energy independence program in Palm Desert and elsewhere in California.

The lawsuit alleges that the FHFA regulation is unlawful, and in fact directly conflicts with the energy conservation policies of the federal Department of Energy and the White House.

Palm Desert Mayor Pro Tem Jim Ferguson, principal author of the Palm Desert program, said, “The City will do what it takes to help residents conserve energy, realize savings on their energy bills, and reduce Palm Desert’s carbon footprint. The FHFA regulation is completely out of step with the law and policies of the federal government and the State of California.”

Mayor Cindy Finerty agreed, saying, “It’s ironic that the City has to sue the Federal Government to remove an impediment to energy efficiency and conservation – when that is a central part of the Department of Energy’s policy. The City Council believes this is a battle worth fighting.”

Ferguson said, “This City is committed to participating in the fight against global climate change and wasteful energy practices. We have 4,000 hours of sunshine each year, and temperatures frequently exceeding 110 degrees. Utilizing the sun’s radiation to produce electricity will make a significant reduction in the amount of power Palm Desert homeowners consume each year. That saves money and helps preserve our environment – we are not going to be railroaded by an irrational policy decision by federal bureaucrats who are elected by no one and who seek to stand a hundred years of California assessment law on its ear.”

For further information, please call 760-346-0611.

Oh, the suits! Sierra Club is latest to fight FHFA in court over PACE

Click our logo for the Sierra Club homepage.

The Sierra Club has jumped on the PACE lawsuit bandwagon, filing suit last week against the FHFA in District Court here in San Francisco.  I haven’t read the Complaint in detail, but the Sierra Club seems to be claiming damages that its members, who desire clean energy upgrades, have been harmed by the FHFA’s decision.  For those who want to dig in, here’s a PDF of the Sierra Club PACE Complaint.

Sierra Club joins the following PACE lawsuits:

Sonoma County sues Feds to keep PACE alive

Now it’s not just Jerry Brown who’s picking a fight with the Federal Government.  PACE pioneer Sonoma County today filed suit in San Francisco against Fannie, Freddie and the FHFA to protect its PACE program. Sonoma County’s Board of Supervisors had previously decided to keep their program open in defiance of Fannie and Freddie.

The Santa Rosa Press Democrat reported on the lawsuit today.  The article mentions that 21 homeowners dropped out of the program as a result of the FHFA uncertainty, and more disturbingly, that several property owners have been unable to refinance or sell their homes without first retiring their PACE assessments.  As part of its July 6th ruling, the FHFA expressly said that building owners who had previously taken out PACE loans would not be penalized, so this is a troubling development.

Here is the full press release from Sonoma County.

California Attorney General Jerry Brown Files Lawsuit to Protect PACE, Vows to Stop “Regulatory Strangulation”

“Attorney General Edmund G. Brown Jr. today filed a lawsuit against mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac for blocking an innovative California clean energy program that was designed to create tens of thousands of jobs, promote energy independence and lower utility bills…”

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