Boston Herald

Lobbyists fare well in Uber debate

PR firms also clean up at State House

- By MATT STOUT — matthew.stout@bostonhera­ld.com

Beacon Hill’s ride-hailing debate was a magnet for lobbyists, who pulled in at least $1.1 million from a flurry of companies trying to influence the industry-defining legislatio­n lawmakers passed last summer.

The tally, detailed in records encompassi­ng lobbying activity in 2016, helped pace the action in the State House last year, with Uber investing nearly $330,000 in lobbyists and its competitor, Lyft, spending $230,000, public relation expenses included.

But the race to craft the bill drew far more than ride-hailing outfits. Companies ranging from FedEx to insurance giant GEICO and Enterprise Rent-ACar reported paying lobbyists tens of thousands of dollars to influence the legislatio­n, which ultimately installed a system of background checks for drivers and sets insurance thresholds for companies.

“I was told by some people that have been doing this a lot longer than I have that this was one of the most active and interestin­g discussion­s and debates that they’ve ever seen,” said state Rep. Aaron Michlewitz, who last session co-chaired the Joint Committee on Financial Services, which was at the center of the debate. “It certainly consumed a lot of the discussion from the committee’s standpoint,” Michlewitz said. “It could have been overwhelmi­ngly at certain points in time.”

The lobbying figures could grow as more filings trickle onto the Secretary of State’s website. But records show nearly a dozen companies or groups tied to the legislatio­n, such as Uber, which had hired Beacon Strategies Group and Brown Rudnick.

An Uber spokeswoma­n did not return a message seeking comment yesterday.

But the so-called “Uber bill” wasn’t the only action helping fill lobbyists’ coffers.

ML Strategies — which actually didn’t represent anyone in the ride-sharing debate — pulled in more than $4 million in fees alone, by far the most of any firm in the state. The firm’s one-year total, which grew throughout the day yesterday as the records updated, outpaced the highest total for the previous legislativ­e session — which covered 2013 and 2014.

Records also show huge payments from Wynn casinos, which ponied up $276,579 as it successful­ly fought off an appeal from Somerville city officials to score a key environmen­tal permit from the state.

Meanwhile, General Electric forked out $240,000 in fees as it moved its headquarte­rs to Boston.

Spectra Energy, which pushed a controvers­ial natural gas pipeline project, paid $260,000 to ML Strategies, which is led by CEO William “Mo” Cowan, a former U.S. Senator and chief of staff to exGov. Deval Patrick.

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