SB 141 LEGISLATIVE ETHICS Number 240 CHAIRMAN SHARP brought up SB 141 as the next order of business before the Senate State Affairs Committee. He asked committee members if they've come up with more possible amendments since the last committee meeting. We do have a side-by-side analysis of the Executive Branch Ethics Act and the Legislative Ethics Act in members' bill packets. He advised members who would like to amend the Executive Branch Ethics Act to do so in the Rules Committee. SENATOR DONLEY stated he has several amendments to offer. CHAIRMAN SHARP stated members should have in their bill packets comments from Susie Barnett of the Legislative Ethics Committee relating to the five amendments adopted at the last meeting. SENATOR DONLEY stated he has information from the legislative drafter on how the legal defense fund provision would relate to the initiative. Senator Donley's amendment, amendment R.4 relates to that. The amendment clarifies that the APOC would set up the regulations and guidelines. It also clarifies that it would be outside the impact of the initiative process. This addresses Senator Pearce's concern. CHAIRMAN SHARP asked if there would be any restrictions on how the defense fund could be used. Is it just for Ethics violations? SENATOR DONLEY replied that's the first time that question has ever been raised to him. He thought it was clear that since it will be under the domain of APOC, it was for some function that was related to your duties as a legislator. CHAIRMAN SHARP agreed; that's what he would think also. SENATOR DUNCAN noted that under subsection (d), the APOC will write regulations on how the money may be expended, that is covered. CHAIRMAN SHARP thinks the APOC could set whatever they want in regulation. Number 335 SENATOR DONLEY made a motion to adopt amendment R.4. CHAIRMAN SHARP asked Senator Donley if he believed, from line 11-19 on page 1 of amendment R.4, that this would not run afoul of the limitations in either the initiative or the bill, since this allows unlimited transfer of campaign money into a defense fund. He thinks the initiative forbids that. SENATOR DONLEY thinks the way to get around that is the contingent effective date. That was the issue the president raised yesterday. If you put that provision into effect before the initiative, the initiative would modify it; if you put it into effect after passage of an initiative, then-- CHAIRMAN SHARP asked if there was objection to amendment R.4. Hearing no objection, the chairman stated the amendment was adopted. He asked if there were other amendments committee members wished to offer at this time. SENATOR DONLEY asked if there wasn't another amendment that Senator Pearce suggested. CHAIRMAN SHARP stated there are some other amendments that Senator Pearce suggested. SENATOR DONLEY stated there was also another amendment he had asked to be drafted that dealt with the newsletter issue. He does not know if it was completed though. That's pretty simple though; it would be easily conceptualized. CHAIRMAN SHARP asked if that was the one with the June 1 deadline. SENATOR DONLEY stated Senator Pearce asked for a June 1 deadline, but Senator Donley thinks July 1 would be a reasonable deadline; that's what he was going to propose to the committee. CHAIRMAN SHARP agreed that there's not enough time to put out a newsletter between the date you get home and June 1. He asked Senator Donley to conceptualize that in writing. He asked for a motion to move the amendments in the committee's possession. Number 380 SENATOR RANDY PHILLIPS made a motion to adopt amendment R.5. SENATOR DONLEY stated amendment R.5 referred to a legislator specifically having a conflict of interest in a committee meeting, and the legislator would then orally disclose the conflict of interest. He does not have a problem with the amendment. CHAIRMAN SHARP, hearing no objection, stated amendment R.5 was adopted. CHAIRMAN SHARP asked if anyone cared to offer amendment R.6. SENATOR RANDY PHILLIPS asked for a brief explanation of the amendment. Number 400 ANN RINGSTAD, Committee Aide to the Senate State Affairs Committee, stated that Senator Pearce was concerned that personal gifts should not be publicly disclosed, but should be disclosed in confidentiality to the Ethics Committee. Only gifts that legislators receive through legislative contacts will be publicly disclosed. SENATOR DONLEY asked what the dollar amount that triggers reporting of gifts will be under SB 141. MS. RINGSTAD stated it will be $250.00 or more. SENATOR LEMAN asked for clarification that this amendment would still require reporting of personal gifts to the Ethics Committee, but the Ethics Committee would not disclose those gifts in the journal. MS. RINGSTAD responded that is correct: that information would be confidential. That is the intent of this amendment. SENATOR DONLEY thinks that C-6 are the ones that are open: public disclosures. MS. RINGSTAD stated it's referring to Section 18, page 10 of the "R" work draft. Number 420 SENATOR RANDY PHILLIPS made a motion to adopt amendment R.6. SENATOR DONLEY stated he seemed to remember that the problem was that you're supposed to report, but it wasn't clear whether you report to the Ethics Committee or to the clerk. This just sets out that you report to the Ethics Committee, and the Ethics Committee forwards the appropriate ones to the clerk, and the clerk then publishes those. MS. RINGSTAD stated that is how she understands it. CHAIRMAN SHARP asked if there was objection to amendment R.6. Hearing none, he stated the amendment was adopted. CHAIRMAN SHARP noted the next amendment was R.7. SENATOR RANDY PHILLIPS stated this is the amendment regarding the deadline. It's hard to comply with the deadline, because limited partnership reports aren't received until after the first of March. CHAIRMAN SHARP agreed it is impossible to comply. SENATOR DONLEY stated he hasn't yet heard a motion. SENATOR DUNCAN stated he's not moving it. CHAIRMAN SHARP stated you won't hear it from him. SENATOR RANDY PHILLIPS stated he has an amendment dealing with legislative spouses lobbying for compensation. It was brought to his intention that the amendment on this subject which was previously adopted might be interpreted to mean spouses of legislators would not have the ability to testify before a committee. This would keep the prohibition, but would allow spouses to testify before committees. He asked the legislative drafter if he correctly explained the amendment. Number 455 TERRY CRAMER, Attorney, Legislative Legal and Research Services, stated the explanation was fine. She is not sure the original amendment would have been interpreted with that result, but it was confusingly drafted. CHAIRMAN SHARP stated he was thinking about revisiting that amendment for rescinding action. SENATOR DUNCAN asked if this would replace the language previously adopted. SENATOR RANDY PHILLIPS stated yes. MS. CRAMER stated the original language had two new sections. The first of the two new sections is deleted by this amendment, so you're only putting in one new section. The language you're deleting raised the possibility that you would be denying spouses free speech. SENATOR DUNCAN asked if he is looking at the correct amendment: R.1 SENATOR RANDY PHILLIPS replied, no, Senator Duncan should be looking at amendment R.8. SENATOR DUNCAN stated he does not have the amendment. MS. CRAMER responded that R.8 is the new one. If you start with R.1, and delete what's labeled as Section 2, you get there. SENATOR DUNCAN stated that R.1 doesn't say delete anything. CHAIRMAN SHARP doesn't think he has it. MS. CRAMER stated the amendment is not drafted as an amendment to the amendment. It's drafted as an amendment to the bill. SENATOR DUNCAN stated that they've already adopted an amendment to the bill, so-- SENATOR RANDY PHILLIPS asked if it could be redrafted to make the amendment an amendment to the amendment. MS. CRAMER responded yes. CHAIRMAN SHARP thinks that's a little hard to do, since the amendment's been adopted. SENATOR DUNCAN stated we can rescind our action on the other one and adopt this one. SENATOR DONLEY replied, no, we've got a cs before us; it can just be conceptual. MS. CRAMER replied she can do whatever the committee wishes. CHAIRMAN SHARP asked if rescinding our previous action and then reenacting this do it? MS. CRAMER responded if you rescinded your previous action in adopting M.1, and adopted R.8, then you would get there. But I should also point out that R.1 was rolling in M.1 and a couple of others that you had adopted at that meeting. SENATOR DUNCAN asked if R.1 was adopted in it's entirety. SENATOR RANDY PHILLIPS replied, right. SENATOR DUNCAN stated they did not. MS. RINGSTAD responded those were the three amendments the committee adopted on Tuesday, and rather than rolling it into another bill, she just had Ms. Cramer roll it in to this one amendment, so you can see what was going to be put in. SENATOR DUNCAN stated the amendments were adopted separately, though. MS. RINGSTAD replied that's correct. MS. CRAMER stated as long as the committee is not actually adopting R.1, you can go back and rescind-- SENATOR DUNCAN stated they've already adopted everything in R.1. MS. CRAMER responded they've adopted the contents of R.1, but not the form of R.1. So you could rescind M.1 and adopt R.8. CHAIRMAN SHARP asked Senator Phillips how he wanted to get there. MS. CRAMER stated she can also do a "quick and dirty" amendment to R.1. SENATOR RANDY PHILLIPS stated that's what he was thinking of doing, because that would be easier than going through two motions, and trying to explain all this. Basically what he wants to do is refine the amendment that was made. SENATOR DONLEY asked Senator Phillips to explain again the amendment. SENATOR RANDY PHILLIPS stated the amendment adopted a few days ago, makes total prohibition, if you're being paid as a lobbyist, to be married to a lobbyist, as a legislator. SENATOR DONLEY noted, you mean to be married to a legislator? CHAIRMAN SHARP responded, yes, a lobbyist married to a legislator. SENATOR DUNCAN added, and cohabitating. SENATOR RANDY PHILLIPS stated if you are married to someone who's not paid as a lobbyist, but wanted to testify before a committee, then that would also be prohibited. That was not the intent of the amendment. SENATOR LEMAN asked where that appears in this amendment? He is not seeing it. MS. RINGSTAD showed Senator Leman where that is in the amendment. MS. CRAMER explained she is not sure that it would be interpreted to deny spouses the opportunity to approach legislators and legislative committees, but it might be. SENATOR RANDY PHILLIPS stated they have a fax from the Ethics Committee stating they have a different view of the world on this one. Number 515 SENATOR DONLEY asked if the proposed amendment would allow a spouse who wasn't a lobbyist to do whatever they want. SENATOR RANDY PHILLIPS replied, yes. SENATOR DONLEY asked if it would allow a spouse who was a registered lobbyist to participate in the legislative process for things other than the clients they represent? He asked Senator Phillips if he understood the question. Senator Donley thinks they should have freedom of speech. SENATOR DUNCAN thinks this is getting confusing, the way it's drafted. He thinks this could be corrected in the Rules Committee. SENATOR RANDY PHILLIPS stated that's fine. He doesn't care, frankly. He withdrew the amendment. SENATOR DONLEY doesn't think it's that hard. We just need to decide how much freedom of speech to give them. SENATOR RANDY PHILLIPS agreed, but he doesn't want to risk losing the whole amendment, so he would just as soon keep the ban for everyone. SENATOR DONLEY asked Senator Phillips if he is withdrawing the amendment. SENATOR RANDY PHILLIPS stated if Senator Donley is interested, he will move it again, as written by Ms. Cramer. CHAIRMAN SHARP asked Senator Donley if he had an amendment. Number 535 SENATOR DONLEY stated he had an amendment dealing with a deadline for sending out newsletters. He asked if Senator Phillips amendment was adopted. CHAIRMAN SHARP stated Ms. Cramer is currently redrafting the amendment. SENATOR DONLEY asked the chairman if he would like to move on to that amendment. CHAIRMAN SHARP responded yes. SENATOR DONLEY stated there is a provision suggested by the Ethics Committee that we not allow newsletters within 90 days of an election. CHAIRMAN SHARP stated they suggested June 1, the filing deadline. SENATOR DONLEY thinks they're trying to address something that isn't really a problem. The compromise, since they seem to be intimidated into doing some of these ridiculous things, would be to change it to July 1. He doesn't think he's ever gotten a newsletter out by June 1. Between the end of session, being on the road, and your equipment being shipped back for two weeks, there is no way to get it done by June 1. SENATOR RANDY PHILLIPS agreed. SENATOR DONLEY thinks the whole thing ought to be deleted. SUSIE BARNETT, Professional Assistant, Legislative Ethics Committee, clarified that on page 3, lines 22 and 23, the funds referred to are leadership funds or committee funds, those kinds of things. It wouldn't affect your office account funds. SENATOR DONLEY thanks Ms. Barnett for that correction. He did not understand what the committee was proposing. He suggested a July 1 cutoff for mailings. A committee will not be able to generate something before July 1. SENATOR DUNCAN is not sure a committee should do something. Why would we want to authorize a committee to do a mailing at all during election season? A committee doesn't need to do a newsletter. SENATOR RANDY PHILLIPS agreed. He doesn't think Senator Donley wants the amendment he is proposing. SENATOR DUNCAN does not think Senator Donley would want that amendment either. SENATOR DONLEY doesn't care. He thinks maybe since he hasn't been a chairman in so long, he wouldn't know what to do with it. CHAIRMAN SHARP asked if the committee wanted to try to define "campaign period", delete "campaign period", delete all of Section 3? He doesn't care. SENATOR DUNCAN suggested leaving it alone. He thinks with Ms. Barnett's explanation that Section 3 is okay. It's only referring to a committee mailing. SENATOR LEMAN asked, what committee funds? TAPE 96-25, SIDE B CHAIRMAN SHARP asked if they have an amendment that addresses the page of the bill where the amendment ended up? Number 580 MS. CRAMER stated committee members have in front of them a handwritten amendment to amendment R.1. Page 1, line 5 through page 2, line 8 refers to amendment R.1, not to the bill. CHAIRMAN SHARP asked if they can do that. SENATOR RANDY PHILLIPS stated they could. MS. CRAMER stated page 2, lines 9-16 is what is left. SENATOR DUNCAN asked if everything would be taken out, but leave Section 3 in? MS. CRAMER responded, yes. Number 558 SENATOR RANDY PHILLIPS made a motion to adopt the amendment to amendment R.1. He asked Ms. Cramer to explain the amendment once again. MS. CRAMER replied the amendment to amendment R.1 would delete most of the material on page 1 and the first 8 lines on page 2. It leaves in place proposed new bill Section 3 and all the rest of the material in amendment R.1. SENATOR DONLEY asked what the amendment would do. MS. CRAMER responded it would take out language that appeared to suggest that spouses and spousal equivalents of legislators would not be able to testify before committees or interact with legislators on issues that they were concerned about, if they are not paid lobbyists. CHAIRMAN SHARP asked if that includes employees that are sent to lobby, if they are legislative spouses. MS. CRAMER replied that it would, if they were required to register as a lobbyist. CHAIRMAN SHARP asked if that meant that a governmental lobbyist, if they were a legislative spouse, would still be able to lobby the legislature? MS. CRAMER responded they could, because governmental folks are not covered by the lobbying law. CHAIRMAN SHARP thinks lobbying is lobbying. If you're asking for money or lobbying for a cause.... He has just seen a new federal law that forbids any lobbying by the beneficiaries of federal funds that are passed on through state grants. SENATOR DONLEY asked if they didn't have the prohibition where you can't use the money from a grant to come back and lobby with it? CHAIRMAN SHARP stated now, no beneficiaries of that money cannot lobby. SENATOR DUNCAN stated that would empty the hallways. Number 530 CHAIRMAN SHARP asked if there was any objection to the amendment to amendment R.1. Hearing none, he stated it was adopted. SENATOR LEMAN stated he has two other issues. The first relates to a letter of intent. He would prefer to change the statute. He asked Ms. Cramer to explain why she recommended a letter of intent. MS. CRAMER stated she could not find anything in the bill that would prohibit being employed by a political subdivision, so she couldn't find anything to amend to say it didn't apply to that. SENATOR LEMAN stated that is exactly his point: it never was the intent, but it is now the interpretation under which we have to operate. SENATOR RANDY PHILLIPS asked if that is APOC or the Ethics Committee? SENATOR LEMAN stated it is APOC. He asked if the regulations have been adopted yet. BROOKE MILES, Regulation of Lobbying, Alaska Public Offices Commission, stated the regulations have been adopted. SENATOR LEMAN thinks the APOC has gone well beyond legislative intent. Number 510 MS. CRAMER asked what the source of the prohibition was against municipal employment or political subdivision employment. SENATOR LEMAN asked Ms. Barnett if she would respond to that. MS. BARNETT responded no. She is not sure which section they are talking about. Are they talking about contracts and leases? SENATOR LEMAN asked for an explanation of what the Ethics Committee advisory opinion or ruling was on employment by a municipality, if that municipality was funding that project from an appropriation by the state. MS. BARNETT replied the advisory opinion to which she thinks Senator Leman is referring was an early 1993 opinion. That opinion referred to source of funds. It is the burden of the legislator or legislative employee to research what the source of funds are for contracts, leases, or grants. Is that what he is referring to? So it could affect contract employment. But there isn't anything regarding employment with a political subdivision under the new law. However, there was a memo put out years ago which addressed political subdivisions and employment by legislators. Does that ring a bell to Ms. Cramer? MS. CRAMER replied the only bell it rings with her is that you can be employed by a political subdivision and not violate dual office holding under the constitution. She doesn't think she's ever thought about political subdivision with the Ethics Code. SENATOR DONLEY stated he remembers a big floor fight and a vote in the house. MS. CRAMER stated there may have been a proposal that she was not involved in drafting. SENATOR DONLEY stated the house took it out of the bill. He thinks that was the year it passed the house, but didn't pass the senate. But there hasn't been an objection to it. CHAIRMAN SHARP stated he has no objection. He didn't know a legislator couldn't work professionally on a professional contract, or digging a ditch as far as that's concerned, for any municipality, no matter where the money comes from, when he or she wasn't in session. It's up to the municipality to bid it out. He can't imagine prohibiting that kind of work. What the hell's a guy supposed to do to make a living in this state? SENATOR DONLEY asked if anyone objects. Number 480 CHAIRMAN SHARP doesn't have an objection, but thinks a letter of intent is a weak way to go about it. He would load it right in the damn statute. MS. CRAMER stated she can create a place in statute, but if she doesn't know toward what harm she's directing the medicine, it may not be as useful as if she did. SENATOR LEMAN moved the adoption of the letter of intent. Number 465 CHAIRMAN SHARP asked if there was objection to the letter of intent. Hearing none, he stated the letter of intent was adopted. He also suggested that Senator Leman might wish to load that language somewhere in the bill. SENATOR LEMAN stated he has one other point on Section 45, page 24, lines 17-21. It has to deal with the word "substantial". The APOC has come up with what he thinks is an obtuse interpretation of "substantial". For example, if a legislator pays over $5,000.00 in raw fish taxes, then you have a substantial interest in state government. So the legislator then has to report the source and the amount of income. He thinks that interpretation is at odds with the original intent of the legislation. SENATOR DONLEY asked what Senator Leman would propose. SENATOR LEMAN stated he would propose defining "substantial". He asked Ms. Cramer if there is a definition for "substantial". MS. CRAMER does not recall that there is a definition for "substantial". There certainly isn't in AS 24.60. [After looking, Ms. Cramer does find a definition for substantial.] It is a long paragraph. "A person has a substantial interest in legislative, administrative, or political action if they will be directly and substantially affected financially by the action...." SENATOR DONLEY commented he loves it when the definition includes the word being defined. MS. CRAMER continued, stating there are some exceptions. If they seek contracts in excess of $10,000.00 or if they are lobbyists. It's not exactly helpful. SENATOR LEMAN stated that the APOC, by regulation, has now further interpreted that to mean anyone who pays more than $5,000.00 in taxes, because they might be affected by an action of state government. SENATOR DONLEY asked Senator Leman to just tell him what he wanted. MS. CRAMER stated she is not clear on the direction Senator Leman wants her to go. Number 406 SENATOR DONLEY asked how about raising the dollar amount from $1,000.00. SENATOR RANDY PHILLIPS asked what they do if they get a dividend over $1,000.00. Do they then have a substantial interest in that? SENATOR LEMAN thinks the problem hasn't been so much the limit, as the interpretation of "substantial". SENATOR RANDY PHILLIPS asked Senator Leman to consider coming up with an amendment for the Rules Committee. Number 375 SENATOR DONLEY stated legislators have had definitions before about conflicts of interest that have run into the idea of, if it's a benefit available to a large group, you know what I mean? That might work. There are thousands of people selling that fish, so Senator Leman is one of a large group. SENATOR LEMAN added that all the fish buyers are doing is collecting the tax and passing it on. CHAIRMAN SHARP asked if there are any further specific amendments. Hearing none, he asked what the pleasure of the committee was. Number 362 SENATOR RANDY PHILLIPS made a motion to discharge SB 141 from the Senate State Affairs Committee with individual recommendations. CHAIRMAN SHARP, hearing no objection, stated SB 141 was discharged from the Senate State Affairs Committee. SENATOR DONLEY thanked the committee and committee staff for all their time and effort on SB 141. CHAIRMAN SHARP replied that most of the thanks should go to the committee staff person.