Howard Dean is a man with strong Clinton-esque tendencies.

He’s a self-described triangulator.

Say good words about the environment.

Take some positive action.

Schmooze with the environmentalists.

But when push comes to shove, don’t offend the powers that be.

Mark Sinclair is an senior attorney with the Conservation Law Foundation
in Vermont.

Sinclair was dismissed in 2001 from Dean’s Council of Environmental
Advisers because of his criticisms of the Governor.

Sinclair says that two utilities in Vermont — Green Mountain Power and
Central Vermont Public Service — along with IBM — control the state.

“Dean is in the pockets of the utilities and of IBM,” Sinclair told us.
“Whatever the major economic interest, he’s beholden to them.”

“During his years as Governor, there was a large controversy over our
ski areas,” Sinclair said. “He supported their major expansion, which
has resulted in ski mountain sprawl in places like Killington, Stowe
Mountain Resort, Stratton Mountain.”

“Dean wasn’t standing up for sustainable development,” Sinclair said.
“During his watch, we saw a lot more sprawl and strip development.”

Despite his professed love of rail transit, Dean pushed development of a
major highway project around Burlington, even though he knew it would be disastrous for land use planners.

IBM wanted it, so Dean went along.

Why did IBM want it?

According to Sinclair, IBM has a major facility in the area and Big Blue
wanted to make the taxpayers pay for the road improvements.

This is one thing that Bush’s EPA and Dean agree on — build the beltway
around Burlington. The environmental community in Vermont is opposed.

The Burlington highway fight is typical of Dean. He actually cares about
light rail, and prefers it to more highways, according to Sinclair. But
when push came to shove, he didn’t dare stand up to IBM’s demands.

Sinclair says that Dean understands the problem of sprawl — he gets it.

But time and again, he “refused to stand up and allow his regulators to
stand up and say no to sprawl.”

Dean lured a major Canadian plastics company — the Husky Company — to Vermont. Governor Dean allowed them to build on farmlands outside the town of Milton – north of Burlington.

“Instead of telling that developer to build in an industrial park, he
showed them a greenfield and allowed them to build in a greenfield,”
Sinclair said. “Convert farmfields into pavement. Once again, when there
was a conflict between sprawl and big development, the Governor Dean
sided with big development.”

After Dean’s tenure, the Green Mountain State came to look just like the
rest of the country.

“He doesn’t believe in land use planning, and provided no funding for
Vermont’s towns to do the planning they need,” Sinclair said. “As a
result, Vermont reacts to development. The only reason we don’t look
like Maryland is because we are a colder climate and people are just
discovering us.”

Elizabeth Courtney of the Vermont Natural Resources Council also had hermrun-ins with Governor Dean.

Dean dismissed Courtney in 2001 from the Governor’s Council of
Environmental Advisers because of an article she wrote for the
Burlington Free Press. In the article, Courtney was critical of Governor
Dean’s plan to bring a coal-powered electric generation plant to
northern Vermont. The coal powered plant never materialized.

Sinclair has had many dealings with the Governor and doesn’t like his style.

“He very much knows what he thinks,” Sinclair says. “He doesn’t listen
very well. He’s very sure of himself. He shoots from the hip a lot. He
doesn’t believe in surrounding himself with a lot of strong leaders.
He’s smart, so he seems to know what the public wants to hear.”


Russell Mokhiber is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based Corporate Crime Reporter, http://www.corporatecrimereporter.com. Robert Weissman is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based Multinational Monitor,http://www.multinationalmonitor.org. They are co-authors of Corporate Predators: The Hunt for MegaProfits and the Attack on Democracy (Monroe, Maine: Common Courage Press; http://www.corporatepredators.org).


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Robert Weissman is president of Public Citizen and a staunch public interest advocate and activist, as well as an expert on corporate and government accountability. He worked as director of the corporate accountability organization Essential Action from 1995 to 2009. From 1989 to 2009, he was editor of the Multinational Monitor, a magazine that tracked multinational corporations. Weissman helped make HIV drugs available to the developing world and has provided assistance to numerous governments on intellectual property and access to medicine issues. He previously worked as a public interest attorney at the Center for Study of Responsive Law.

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