December 23, 2024
Changes in California Energy Leadership Continue
CPUC headquarters in San Francisco
CPUC headquarters in San Francisco | © RTO Insider LLC
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Recent departures at CAISO, the California Public Utilities Commission and the California Energy Commission require new appointments by Gov. Gavin Newsom.

A trend of job changes and departures in California’s three major energy agencies has continued during the past two months, as officials opted to leave CAISO, the Public Utilities Commission and the Energy Commission, allowing Gov. Gavin Newsom to appoint replacements.

At CAISO, Governor Ashutosh Bhagwat opted not to seek another term after 12 years of service. Bhagwat chaired the Board of Governors last year; his most recent term ended Dec. 31.

“It has been a truly fantastic 12-year run, like nothing else I’ve had in my life,” Bhagwat said during the board’s last meeting of the year Dec 15. “I’ve enjoyed it thoroughly.”

The University of California, Davis, law professor plans to leave the board by the end of February or as soon as Newsom names his successor

At the CPUC, Commissioner Clifford Rechtschaffen chose to leave when his six-year term ended in December. Former Gov. Jerry Brown appointed Rechtschaffen, his senior adviser on climate and energy issues, to serve on the CPUC beginning in January 2017.

“My term at the CPUC was very rewarding, but I just turned 65, and I’m ready to move on to the next phase in my professional life, including doing some teaching again,” Rechtschaffen, a professor at Golden Gate University School of Law in San Francisco and graduate of Yale Law School, said in an email to RTO Insider.

On Dec. 22, Newsom said he was appointing Karen Douglas, his senior energy adviser and former member of the CEC, to fill the open CPUC seat left by Rechtschaffen.

A month later, Newsom’s office announced that CEC Commissioner Kourtney Vaccaro had been appointed technical adviser to Douglas at the CPUC. Vaccaro had served on the CEC since March 2022. She previously worked as Douglas’ top adviser at the CEC, where she had held multiple positions including chief counsel.

Newsom must next appoint a new CEC commissioner. The position requires confirmation by the State Senate, as do seats on the CAISO board and CPUC.

The series of personnel changes are similar to those that occurred in December 2021 and early 2022, when Newsom chose Douglas as his energy adviser, named Vaccaro to the CEC and appointed his senior energy adviser, Alice Reynolds, as the new CPUC president.

Earlier in 2021, Newsom appointed CEC Deputy Director Siva Gunda as a commissioner and chose then-CEC General Counsel Darcie Houck to fill an open spot on the CPUC, after he selected CPUC Commissioner Liane Randolph to head the influential California Air Resources Board.

Once the latest round of changes is complete, all five commissioners of the CPUC, four of five CAISO governors and the majority of CEC commissioners will be Newsom appointees. The governor has sought to exercise control over the state’s energy institutions with an aggressive climate agenda and efforts to keep the lights on following rolling blackouts ordered by CAISO in August 2020.

CAISO Board of GovernorsCaliforniaCalifornia Energy Commission (CEC)California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC)

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