Oynes served as U.S. Minerals Management Service (MMS) associate director for offshore energy and minerals management before he retired in May 2010. During the 1990s, Oynes served as Deputy Regional Director of the Gulf of Mexico Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) Region, and he was named Regional Director of that office in 1995.[7] Oynes who oversaw oil and gas leasing in the Gulf of Mexico[8] for 13 years[7] before being promoted to MMS associate director. In his duties as Regional Director of the Gulf of Mexico office, Oynes' managed the leasing of the OCS lands for oil, gas, and other marine minerals. This office was also responsible for environmental protection of these leased areas.[8] Oynes supervised a staff of 550 federal employees, including environmental scientists, biologists, geologists, geophysicists, and petroleum engineers.[8] Oynes had come under fire for being too close to the industry officials he regulated.[9][4]
During his tenure at the Gulf regional office in Louisiana for the MMS, Oynes played a central role in an offshore leasing foul-up[10][11][12][13] that cost taxpayers an estimated $10 billion in lost revenue.[11] The Interior Department's inspector general called the matter "a jaw-dropping example of bureaucratic bungling."[14][15][16][17][18] Despite that, the agency's then-director, Johnnie Burton, promoted Oynes in 2007 to associate director for the offshore program.[7][15][19][4][20][14][21][10]
On May 24, 2010 The New York Times reported that under his watch in the Gulf, MMS regulators allowed industry officials to fill in their own inspection reports in pencil and then turned them over to the regulators, who traced over them in pen before submitting the reports to the agency. MMS staff also routinely accepted meals, tickets to sporting events and other gifts from oil companies.[22][23][24] In 2008, a report from the Interior Department's Inspector-General found that MMS employees had received improper gifts from energy industry representatives.[5][24][25][26] Another Inspector General report from 2010 found additional ethical lapses involving MMS employees and employees from oil and gas companies.[27][28]
Lee Tilton, the former Chief, Office of Congressional Affairs (OCA), for the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management,[29][30] was a former protégé of Chris Oynes.[31]
^ abMulligan, James S. (September 2011). "Case Study: Minerals Management Service"(PDF). Burlington, VT: Institute for Environmental Diplomacy and Security, James M. Jeffords Center, University of Vermont. Retrieved 22 July 2020.
^Heersink, Emily (2008). "Royalty Robbery: How Statutory Supremacy and the "Christian" Doctrine Require Oil Companies to Pay Royalties on Leases Missing the Deep Water Royalty Relief Price Threshold Clause". Public Contract Law Journal. 37 (2). Chicago, IL: American Bar Association: 319. JSTOR25755455.