Los Angeles Times

Nonprofits seek a broader lobbying exemption

L.A. considers lifting requiremen­t that groups report costs and targets of efforts.

- By Emily Alpert Reyes

When Los Angeles lawmakers have weighed hotly contested issues such as whether to increase the minimum wage or how to regulate street vendors, nonprofits have frequently piped up in the debates ringing through City Hall.

Now L.A. could exempt many of those groups from revealing whom they lobby in local government and how much they spend to do so.

Nonprofits and lobbying groups are “not similarly situated organizati­ons,” Serena Oberstein, vice president of the Los Angeles City Ethics Commission, said at a recent meeting. “Lobbyists are mostly, if not always, forprofit organizati­ons acting in their own interest.”

But groups that advocate for open government caution that nonprofits can nonetheles­s be key players in politics.

“Any informatio­n about who has inf luence over political or legislativ­e decisions is critical context for democracy,” said Stephen Larrick, director of the Open Cities team at the Sunlight Foundation. The goal of revealing who is trying to influence politician­s “is not to make things difficult for lobbyists — it is to provide this context.”

Under its lobbying ordinance, Los Angeles requires people who are paid to try to influence city officials on municipal legislatio­n to register and turn in regular reports on their spending.

That can include employees at nonprofits such as the Natural Resources Defense Council, Animal Defenders Internatio­nal and the Los Angeles Alliance for a New Economy, an influentia­l group focused on labor and environmen­tal issues that was fined $30,000 last year for failing to properly report its lobbying activities.

However, L.A. currently exempts some nonprofits from having to register and report their lobbying — those that were created chiefly to provide “direct services” to the poor, that do so for free and that get government funding to represent the interests of the indigent.

When the city started reviewing and updating its lobbying regulation­s, nonprofits pushed to expand that exemption.

The Alliance for Justice, a national associatio­n that helps nonprofits participat­e in the democratic process, argued that all 501(c)(3) or-

ganization­s should be exempt, saying the complicate­d requiremen­ts could discourage nonprofits from speaking up.

Nona Randois, the associatio­n’s California director, said that some of those requiremen­ts could require groups to file frequent reports even if they never contact a city official and merely do research on a city issue. That could discourage a community group from producing a report on the need for more public toilets on skid row, the group argued.

Randois also stressed that 501(c)(3)s already face federal restrictio­ns and reporting requiremen­ts on lobbying. “This would be an additional layer for them, making it harder for them to achieve their charitable missions,” she said.

“Groups that help unhoused people find housing, groups that work with lowincome communitie­s impacted by toxic land uses, organizati­ons that serve our neediest residents ... they want to be able to continue to advocate for the communitie­s they serve,” Randois added.

The Inner City Law Center argued that even being categorize­d as a “lobbyist” carried a stigma that could cause nonprofits to lose donors. And Redeemer Community Partnershi­p, a South L.A. nonprofit that has argued against oil drilling in urban neighborho­ods, warned that moneyed opponents like the oil industry could “weaponize” the rules to attack small community groups.

Ethics Commission staffers resisted the idea of a blanket exemption for nonprofits, stressing that the rules are meant to ensure that the public knows who is trying to influence city decisions, no matter why they are doing so.

They also warned that totally exempting nonprofits could encourage other groups to start charities in order to dodge lobbying regulation­s.

And they stressed that many kinds of involvemen­t in city issues — such as speaking at a public meeting — will not be counted as lobbying activities. Under the proposed rules, groups would have to devote at least $5,000 to trying to influence a city matter annually before they would have to register.

The Los Angeles Lobbyist Assn., a trade group, argued in a letter earlier this year that if a soup kitchen or a homeless shelter had employees trying to sway the City Council to adopt a “living wage” ordinance or shift more of the city budget to homeless services, the public has a right to know about their lobbying, just as it does about other groups advocating on the same issues.

After a string of hearings, the commission instead recommende­d that the city expand its current exemption, allowing any 501(c)(3) organizati­on that gets less than $2 million in total income annually to avoid registerin­g.

The commission also recommende­d exempting any 501(c)(3) nonprofits that were formed primarily to provide food, clothing, shelter, health care and other assistance to disadvanta­ged people at reduced rates, no matter how much money they took in.

Those recommenda­tions were closely modeled off a proposal touted by several nonprofits at a recent Ethics Commission meeting. The organizati­ons had offered up the idea as an alternativ­e to exempting all charities. They argued that bigger organizati­ons were more likely to have the resources to track and report their lobbying at the city level.

But the proposed exemption would also free bigger organizati­ons that help the poor with food, clothing, legal assistance or other aid from having to report their lobbying. It is unclear exactly which organizati­ons that might cover, but some nonprofits that assist the disadvanta­ged have been important and sometimes controvers­ial players in local politics.

The AIDS Healthcare Foundation, a massive nonprofit headquarte­red in Hollywood, provides medical care for people with HIV and AIDS across the globe. Earlier this year, it devoted millions of dollars to an unsuccessf­ul campaign for a ballot measure that would have imposed new restrictio­ns on L.A. real estate developmen­t. After the election, it has continued to fund the Coalition to Preserve L.A., which has raised concerns about city planning issues.

Earle Vaughan, president-elect of the Apartment Assn. of Greater Los Angeles, said he understand­s the financial pressures facing small nonprofits, but large organizati­ons such as the AIDS Healthcare Foundation “can certainly afford to be transparen­t and follow the same rules that we all follow.”

His trade group, which represents apartment building owners, managers and developers, opposes efforts by the AIDS foundation to roll back a state law that limits rent control. “If they’re going to exempt them, they should exempt us,” said Vaughan, whose group has registered and reported its lobbying to the city.

Under the proposed rules, nonprofits — even if they are exempt — still must report such spending if they are lobbying the city to get money, property or permits for themselves. The recommende­d changes, along with other proposed amendments to the lobbying regulation­s, now head to the L.A. City Council for its approval.

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? NONPROFITS and lobbying groups are “not similarly situated organizati­ons,” the vice president of the Los Angeles City Ethics Commission said recently.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times NONPROFITS and lobbying groups are “not similarly situated organizati­ons,” the vice president of the Los Angeles City Ethics Commission said recently.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States