SB 105 LEGISLATIVE ETHICS CODE REFORM  CHAIRMAN GREEN brought SB 105 back before the committee. She directed attention to a proposed amendment which would include the Executive Ethics Act in SB 105. SENATOR WARD moved the adoption of Amendment No. 2, which would add the Executive Ethics Act to SB 105. SENATOR MACKIE objected. SENATOR MACKIE commented that last year's ethics bill didn't make it through the process so he is concerned with what was contained in that bill that members may have had an objection to. He said he thinks SB 105 is a good bill as currently written, and he would appreciate some committee time to sit down with the drafter and staff from the Ethics Committee and go through each one of the changes so everyone fully understands what it does. BEN BROWN , staff to Senator Kelly, assured Senator Mackie that the amendment would only put the executive branch under an ethics code very similar to the one the Legislature currently exists under, but the prime difference being the Personnel Board would play the role that the Ethics Committee plays in the legislative branch. He also clarified that last year's legislation passed the Senate unanimously, but it was the offering of an amendment that dealt with the legislative side of things in the House Finance Committee that ended up tripping the bill up in the final stages of the session, the most controversial of those amendments being a ban on spousal lobbying. SENATOR MACKIE asked if it was the Chair's intent to adopt this one amendment and move the bill out, and CHAIRMAN GREEN acknowledged that was correct. SENATOR MACKIE then removed his objection to the amendment and SENATOR DUNCAN objected, stating he doesn't believe the committee should be adopting a 27-page amendment without having an opportunity to go through and review it. Number 485 Following brief discussion, CHAIRMAN GREEN stated SB 105 would be held over to the Thursday, March 20 meeting.