A lot of times these projects would just suddenly show up and an executive would say, “Hey, we have this project that we think someone should look at.”
Again, there is a legitimate and official process, but some of these projects never followed that official capacity, and this is why I continue to mention the preferential treatment. It's one thing to say everything is done and someone missed a conflict of interest declaration, but for all of these—if not, the majority—it was always some extra case of there being preferential treatment. There is information that clearly shows that the project is ineligible under five or six different categories. For any of those situations, while at the same time they are continuing to push along a project that they shouldn't, they are rejecting other projects that have the same or better impacts on the environment, which they would then reject in place of these projects.