Fine forgiveness bill gets boost in
Senate Ethics, By Chris Joyner, 2/9/16,
AJC
A plan a year in the making to relieve local politicians of millions in outstanding ethics
fines is taking shape in the General Assembly.
The state ethics commission and the lobbyists for the Georgia
Municipal Association and the Association of County Commissioners of Georgia
have worked out a compromise to House Bill 370 to wipe the slate
clean for thousands of county commissioners, mayors, school board members and
other local officials who did not file campaign finance reports from
2010-2014. The catch: To get their fines forgiven, they would still have to
file their missing reports.
“The folks who were in
that period still had an obligation to file,” said ethics commission executive
director Stefan Ritter. “By and large, people did not do that.”
State Rep Barry
Fleming, R-Harlem, offered no objection to the Senate committee substitute to
his fine-clearing bill.
The problem stems from
a period when local officials were required to electronically file their
campaign reports directly with the state. Before 2010, city and county
politicians could file paper reports with a local clerk — or, commonly, just
ask the clerk to do it for them. The change resulted in confusion and a tidal
wave of complaints and non-compliance from local officials, many of whom said
they were unable to access the state’s often balky and confusing online filing
system.
In 2014, lawmakers
changed the law back, once again returning the filing of local campaign reports
to local filing officers. But by then the ethics commission’s late- and
non-filer list had grown exponentially, filed with local politicians who were
unable or unwilling to file with the state.
The commission’s database of late filers currently has about 27,000 entries, most of which represent
missing local reports.
Under the Senate
committee substitute, local officials on the ethics commission’s late list
would have until Dec. 31 to get their old reports in. Once received, the ethics
commission would remove their names from the delinquent list, but the
commission would have a year to review the reports and could return names to
the list if the reports were not adequate.
The committee did not
vote on the substitute. That’s likely to come when they meet again next week.
Lawmakers, who have
heard the complaints from their local politicians for years, are eager to put
this issue to bed. To grease the skids, the committee stripped from the bill a
controversial plan to regulate political speech by requiring broad disclosure
of spending for billboards, mailers, phone banking and other forms of
electioneering not already captured by state ethics laws.
Prior to the committee
meeting, political activists were preparing for a fight.
One of several emailed
warnings sent by activists prior to the Senate Ethics Committee meeting
Tuesday.
“Wake up people!”
screamed one email notice sent Monday by conservative activist Jack Staver.
“Don’t let them kill free speech in Georgia tomorrow!”
Political activists
from the tea party and other political subgroups line the halls of the Capitol
during the legislative session bending lawmakers’ ears about their concerns. It
is disruptive and effective. After the session ends, some of them get
involved in primary campaigns against those same lawmakers.
Legislative leaders
like House Speaker David Ralston, R-Blue Ridge, have complained that these
activists have the run of the Capitol but are not required to disclose how they
fund their campaigns.
Ralston proposed the
registration requirement in 2014 to howls of protest from
activists. Although the Senate committee stripped the language from HB 370
Wednesday, the discussion may not be over.
“So dark money can
remain hidden?” Ralson’s spokesman Kaleb McMichen tweeted in
response to news about the committee substitute. “Hmmm, appears openness and
transparency should only apply to some.”
Comments
The purpose of the
reports is to give voters access to the names of campaign contributors prior to
elections. They include special interest groups and individual contributors.
The purpose of our
intervention in this case was to remove the parts of the Bill that would remove
voters’ free speech rights. This is the same coalition that stopped the
T-SPLOST in 2012.
Taxpayers’
Associations, joined by Tea Party and similar groups since 2010 have been the
only groups who have been representing voter and taxpayer interests at the Gold
Dome. We continue to lobby the Gold Dome to repeal the Regionalism Laws and
other bad laws that limit voter participation and threaten property rights and voter
control of all layers of government.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody
GA Tea Party Leader.
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