Legislators and corporate lobbyists meet in secret at Georgia resort
The Georgia
Legislature has a message for voters: don't ask us about our meetings with
corporate lobbyists behind closed doors.
The Georgia
Legislature has a message for voters: don’t ask us about our meetings with
corporate lobbyists behind closed doors. WXIA Brendan Keefe and Michael King,
WXIA-TV, Atlanta 11:04 a.m. EDT May 22, 2015
ALEC: The
American Legislative Exchange Council
SAVANNAH, Ga.
(WXIA) – The Georgia Legislature has a message for voters: don't ask us about
our meetings with corporate lobbyists behind closed doors.
The 11Alive
Investigators tracked lawmakers to a resort hotel in Savannah last week, where
we observed state legislators and lobbyists mingling in the hotel bar the night
before they gathered in private rooms to decide what new laws would best serve
the corporations.
The meetings
were part of the Spring Task Force Summit of the American Legislative Exchange
Council, or ALEC.
What is ALEC?
"It's
really a corporate bill mill," said Sen. Nan Orrock, an Atlanta Democrat
who has served in both houses of the Georgia General Assembly for years.
"They're cranking out legislation, putting it into the hands of
legislators who go back and file it." Orrock would know. She was once a
member of ALEC.
"The
corporations that are there have equal standing with the legislators,"
Sen. Orrock said. "You mean they can vote?" we asked. "They
absolutely can vote, and truth be told, they write the bills," she answered,
referring to the lobbyists.
There really
are back rooms where corporate lobbyists have direct access to lawmakers
completely out of sight, with no transparency or public filings. They're also
wined and dined after hours at these events with nothing recorded on ethics
reports.
We know because
we saw one of these back rooms with our own eyes, and were kicked out with the
aid of off-duty police officers on orders from ALEC staff.
Inside we saw
Bethanne Cooley, Director of State Legislative Affairs for CTIA – The Wireless
Association. She's a top lobbyist for the cell phone industry, registered in
other states, yet she's not registered as a lobbyist in Georgia.
Even though
Cooley was talking about legislation with Georgia Rep. Ben Harbin and other
lawmakers behind closed doors in Savannah, CTIA told the 11Alive Investigators
that Cooley was not lobbying under Georgia's legal definition. The money CTIA
pays to ALEC is not considered a lobbying expenditure, even if ALEC used the
same dollars to pay for the food, drink, and hotel for Georgia lawmakers in
Georgia.
Likewise, Rep.
Harbin and the other Georgia legislators are not required to report who paid
for the hotel rooms, the meals, or any other expenses. If this happened in
Atlanta, and the payments were made by lobbyists, they would be subject to
reporting and a $75 limit.
The 11Alive
Investigators filed half a dozen open records requests with Georgia senators
and representatives, asking for receipts and reimbursement records for travel
to ALEC events.
The legislative
counsel, Wayne Allen, responded on Wednesday, "your request is
denied." Allen added, "The General Assembly is not subject to the Georgia Open Records
law."
That's right,
lawmakers exempted themselves from a law they passed to make Georgia government
more transparent. But that doesn't stop some lawmakers from talking about the
perks to complete strangers in the hotel bar.
Months before
the conference, my family booked a hotel room at the same resort as ALEC. At
the hotel bar, I struck up a conversation with a state representative from New
England. We later verified his identity as an ALEC state chairman. Sitting next
to him at various times were three different self-identified lobbyists who also
didn't mince words about why they were there and who was really paying for the
event.
"We pay
more to be here, so it helps support them," one lobbyist explained to me,
not knowing I was an investigative reporter. She was referring to the state
legislator between us, responding to his request for donations.
When I asked
the state representative how he pays for a trip like this, he told me that ALEC
picks up the hotel room and $350 in expenses directly. He has to come up with
the rest, or tap into his ALEC state reimbursement fund. "This is where
you would come in ma'am," he said, turning toward the lobbyist. "I'm
the state chair of ALEC, and I look for financial supporters, lobbyists and the
like such as yourself, to send us a couple thousand bucks every so often."
ALEC recently
started calling these grants the "state reimbursement fund." Before
that, the grants to lawmakers were called "scholarships." ALEC is a
501(c)(3) educational charity. Its stated mission is to 'educate' state
lawmakers, with industry leaders doing the educating.
Nationwide
records of ALEC scholarships were released as part of an open records request
in Florida for the years 2006, 2007, and 2008. In those years alone, Georgia
lawmakers received more than $170,000 in ALEC scholarships to attend meetings
at resorts across the nation.
A letter House
Speaker David Ralston signed in 2013 on ALEC letterhead, obtained by thinkprogress.org, asked "members of the business
community" to help fund these trips. "Your support of the scholarship
fund is critical, enabling Georgia legislators to join and attend the annual
(ALEC) meetings. Please note that 100 percent of the raised funds are
tax-deductible and are for ALEC expenses directly related to education efforts
for legislators."
Speaker
Ralston's office responded to our request by saying "welcome to
Georgia," but did not answer any of our questions.
What are these
resort meetings all about? By all accounts, the goal is to create new laws in
all 50 states. ALEC Task Force Summits, like the one in Savannah, produce
'model legislation' that is later approved at the annual meeting. These are
ready-made bills with actual blanks where legislators can fill in their state's
name and existing code.
Several laws
currently on the books, under which Georgians are governed, were born in back
rooms at resort hotels.
Georgia's Asbestos Claims Priorities Act severely limits who can file asbestos
claims against corporations in the state. It was passed in 2007, the same year
its sponsors received thousands to attend ALEC conferences. The co-chair of the
ALEC task force that year was a top corporate defense lawyer.
The 11Alive
Investigators tracked the asbestos bill all the way to the place if its birth:
The Venetian Hotel and Casino. The Georgia law began as ALEC model legislation
first approved in a hotel meeting room in Las Vegas.
The three
sponsors of the bill in the Senate received more than $22,000 combined the year
before, the year during, and the year after the asbestos bill was passed.
Speaker Ralston was the lone sponsor in the House.
Sen. Renee
Unterman was the only one of the four sponsors to respond to our request for
comment. She told us she left ALEC years ago because she was one of the only
female members of the organization. She called ALEC a group of "angry
white men" and said the organization that was once controlled by legislators
is now "controlled by industry."
What does ALEC
have to say about all of this? Not much.
We sent two
requests to the organization's media representatives weeks before the
conference asking for a list of ALEC members in the Georgia legislature. The organization
once boasted one third of the Georgia legislature as ALEC members. We got no
reply to our requests.
Reporters have
been denied credentials to cover ALEC events, while others who received ALEC
credentials were barred from covering the closed door task force meetings where
potential laws are discussed between publicly-elected lawmakers and corporate
lobbyists.
The 11Alive
Investigators already have media credentials to cover both houses of the
Georgia General Assembly, so we went to Savannah with those credentials
displayed. We walked through an unlocked door into a committee meeting room
where we were allowed to remain for a few minutes. When were asked to leave by
an ALEC staffer, we immediately left the room, but peppered her with questions
in the public hallway.
"You need
to be credentialed at registration," the unidentified ALEC staffer said.
We showed her
our Georgia Senate and House credentials. She indicated that those were not
good enough for us to observe Georgia lawmakers discussing legislation in
Georgia.
"Nope,
you're not credentialed," she insisted, adding, "you're not allowed
in there."
Following the
woman to the registration desk, I said, "we're credentialed to observe
legislators here in Georgia wherever they meet to discuss laws. Are laws being
made in there?"
Instead of
answering, she called over a sheriff's deputy, one of six off-duty police
officers we observed taking their orders directly from ALEC staff members. He
called three of his fellow deputies as back-up.
Then we were
approached by Bill Meierling, ALEC's Vice President of Communications and
Public Relations with the four deputies keeping a close watch on us. Surely he
would be able to answer our many questions. "Can we interview you?' I
asked. "Actually no," he answered.
According to
ALEC's tax exempt IRS filings, Meierling receives a six-figure salary to deal
with the media, but instead he asked that we turn off our camera. What was
there to hide?
When we refused
to stop recording our interview with him in the public hallway of the hotel,
Meierling said, "OK, well then I'd like to have you escorted out of the
building please." He motioned to the deputies.
"I'm a
guest of this hotel," I said. "I'm actually staying here at this
hotel."
"You are
staying at this hotel?" Meierling asked.
We decided to
ask our questions.
Keefe: "Why
can't the people who elected them see the process?"
Meierling: "This is a private meeting."
Keefe: "A private meeting paid for by whom?"
Meierling: "By our members and donors."
Keefe: "..are lobbyists, correct?"
Meierling: "No."
Keefe: "They're not lobbyists, the ones that we recorded in the bar last night aren't lobbyists that are here as members?"
Meierling: "This is a private meeting."
Keefe: "A private meeting paid for by whom?"
Meierling: "By our members and donors."
Keefe: "..are lobbyists, correct?"
Meierling: "No."
Keefe: "They're not lobbyists, the ones that we recorded in the bar last night aren't lobbyists that are here as members?"
At that point
the ALEC vice president clasped his hands, closed his eyes, and let out a sigh.
He then called over the pack of four deputies without saying another word.
Sheriff's Deputy: "I'm going to have to ask you to leave."
Keefe: "Alright, I'm a guest of the hotel sir."
Sheriff's Deputy: "Not for long. Not for long."
Keefe: "I'm a paying guest of this hotel sir."
Sheriff's Deputy: "We'll take care of that."
Second Deputy: "We'll escort you up to your room and you can get your things."
Keefe: "Alright, I'm a guest of the hotel sir."
Sheriff's Deputy: "Not for long. Not for long."
Keefe: "I'm a paying guest of this hotel sir."
Sheriff's Deputy: "We'll take care of that."
Second Deputy: "We'll escort you up to your room and you can get your things."
The deputies
called for the hotel manager who ultimately kicked us out of our hotel room for
"taking pictures in the hotel."
I asked the
deputies, "did we violate some law or something? I mean are we violating a
law?"The first deputy ignored my question and turned to the second deputy
telling him, "Don't say nothing."
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