Memo to bidders competing to buy Philadelphia Gas Works: Put
a lid on it.
City Councilwoman Marian B. Tasco complained Tuesday that
lobbyists purporting to represent bidders for the city's gas utility have
reached out to her and other Council members, apparently in violation of
confidentiality agreements to keep the sale process secret.
"I have a problem with being contacted by
individuals," Tasco said at a meeting of the Philadelphia Gas Commission,
the city's oversight board that she chairs.
Suzanne Biemiller, Mayor Nutter's first deputy chief of
staff, agreed with Tasco and said the bidders, whose identity the city has
declined to disclose, would be instructed that "they are not to be
contacting City Council members as individuals. . . . That is the last thing we
would want."
It is not entirely clear who was contacting whom, and to
what purpose.
The Nutter administration is in the final phase of a
yearlong process to sell PGW, a transaction that could be worth up to $1.8
billion. The vetting process is being handled internally by a handful of senior
city officials, plus a broker, J.P. Morgan, and the city's financial adviser,
Lazard Frères & Co. L.L.C.
The finalists will receive PGW management presentations this
month before making final proposals in January. The mayor plans to announce his
choice in early February. City Council then will vote on the deal, up or down.
"We don't have any role in the selection process,"
said Tasco, who participated in the meeting by a conference call and declined,
through a spokesperson, to identify which bidders were making contact.
Biemiller told the commission she was unaware of any
lobbying efforts by bidders. Tasco expressed disbelief.
"Everyone else in the city knows this was going
on," she said.
"Maybe they didn't want us to know because we would
have forbidden it from happening," Biemiller said.
Guessing which utilities or private equity firms are vying
to buy PGW has turned into a City Hall parlor game.
"I should say there are certainly many rumors floating
around the city," Biemiller said. "We certainly haven't confirmed any
of those rumors.
"You can't keep people from talking and speculating,
but the bidders themselves are eager to keep their names confidential at this
point."
A Philadelphia Board of Ethics inquiry could be initiated if
someone were found to have broken a confidentiality agreement, Biemiller said.
But it was not clear that it would preclude a bidder from participating.
"We don't anticipate that happening," she said.
Source: Philly.com
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