Westar replaces Wittig

Former executive Jim Haines eager to return to company

? Jim Haines, former chief executive of El Paso Electric, was named Saturday as the new president and chief executive of Westar Energy Inc.

Haines, 56, replaces David Wittig who resigned Friday under federal indictment for fraud and money laundering charges.

Haines takes over Westar beginning Dec. 9. Terms of Haines’ compensation package were not immediately available.

Haines was Westar’s chief operating officer until 1996, when he left to become El Paso’s president and CEO. He retired from the El Paso-based company in November 2001 and has been an adjunct professor of business at the University of Texas-El Paso.

“I feel a significant amount of loyalty to the company, and there are people who I care about,” Haines said. “It’s potentially a great company.

“My intuition tells me that there’s no magic bullet out there.”

The board said in a news release that it was pleased to hire someone with Haines’ experience.

During his tenure, El Paso Electric reduced its debt and preferred stock obligations by more than $500 million and regained its investment grade credit rating.

Positive outlook

At Westar, he inherits control of a company with more than $3 billion in debt and credit rating that Standard & Poor’s is considering downgrading further into junk status.

Haines said turning the company around began with an attitude of each employee to come to work each day to work better than the day before.

“I have no feeling how many months or years it will take to resolve the problems,” Haines said. “You just have to stick with it.”

James Zakoura, an attorney representing Kansas Industrial Consumers who has been critical of Westar’s management, said Haines was “a very strong selection.”

Zakoura called Haines “very intelligent” and said his 25 years working for regulated utilities would serve Westar and its customers well.

“He has experience in turning around companies.”

A logical choice

Haines began his career in 1989 with KG&E, a subsidiary of Westar, in its legal department. In 1984, he became KG&E’s vice president for regulatory affairs. He was KG&E’s group vice president from 1985 to 1992, helping improve its credit rating through financial restructuring.

He was named executive vice president and chief administrative officer of Westar in March 1992. He served as chief operating officer from June 1995 until taking the post with El Paso in 1996. El Paso has about 300,000 customers and about one-quarter the generating capacity of Westar.

Haines was a logical choice because of his previous Westar and KG&E experience, said Walker Hendrix, a Lawrence attorney and counsel for Citizen’s Utility Ratepayers Board. Haines was rumored to be Wittig’s replacement, Hendrix said.

“I think there are a lot of people who have worked with him and have had a relationship with him,” Hendrix said. “They have confidence in him. He knows the company and can move it forward.”

Hendrix also noted that Haines left Westar for El Paso about the same time Wittig came onto the scene at Westar.

“One would have expected in 1995 that Haines would be named director,” Hendrix said. “This is like seeing history that would have occurred if Wittig had not been hired.”

John Wine, a member of the Kansas Corporation Commission, said Haines was a good selection to head Westar.

“Jim Haines has a long record of being a very capable and ethical manager and this is good news for the company,” Wine said.

Wittig era over

Unlike with Wittig, Westar’s board said it would be selecting an independent chairman at a Dec. 11 meeting, a move in line with generally accepted business practices of having an independent governance of a corporate board.

Wittig, 47, had been placed on administrative leave without pay while he fought the charges. In the interim, Westar’s operations were being handled by members of the board and other top executives.

A federal grand jury has accused Wittig and Clinton Odell Weidner II, the former president of the Capital City Bank, of hiding the purpose behind a $1.5 million loan from the bank to Wittig issued last year. Weidner left the bank in March.

The charges against Wittig and Weidner, 49, include conspiracy, money laundering and filing misleading loan documents with the bank. The two have pleaded not guilty and are to stand trial Jan. 22 in U.S. District Court in Topeka.

The indictment said Weidner helped Wittig increase his credit limit at the bank from $3.5 million to $5 million. The loan application said the money would go for home improvements and business investments, among other things. But the indictment said Wittig instead gave Weidner the extra money so he could buy into a Scottsdale, Ariz., real estate development. The indictment did not specify what motivated Wittig.

Westar is the state’s largest electric utility, providing service to about 647,000 Kansas customers. Nothing in the indictment suggests a connection between Wittig’s activity at the bank and Westar.

New era

Haines takes over Westar on the heals of a ruling by state regulators to improve the company’s financial health.

The Kansas Corporation Commission has ordered Westar to reorganize its business to protect electric consumers from risks associated with Westar’s non-utility business interests. Those non-utility business interests include an 88 percent share of the Protection One monitored security firm.

The commission also ordered Westar to reduce its more than $3 billion in debt and move its utility operations into one or more subsidiaries.

Haines said El Paso officials were able to reduce more than half the company’s debt over four years as it emerged from bankruptcy.

“I do not in any way take issue with the KCC that Westar has too much debt,” Haines said.