Miami Herald

Donna Shalala again failed to disclose stock sales

- BY ALEX DAUGHERTY adaugherty@mcclatchyd­c.com

WASHINGTON

Miami Democratic Rep. Donna Shalala failed to publicly report two stock sales, a violation of federal disclosure law for the second time in five months. Earlier this year, she acknowledg­ed that she had failed to report 556 stock sales.

In the most recent failure to disclose financial informatio­n, Shalala said Monday she failed to disclose two stock sales of Tegna, a broadcast, digital media and marketing services company based in Virginia. The first sale, on April 1, 2019, was valued between $15,001 and $50,000 and the second sale, on March 31 of this year, was valued between $1,001 and $15,000. Shalala signed a federal Periodic Transactio­n Report on July 21, more than a year after the first sale and more than three months after the second sale.

The transactio­ns were not publicly reported as required by the STOCK Act, a 2012 law that prohibits members of Congress and their employees from using private informatio­n gleaned from their official positions for personal benefit and requires them to report stock sales and purchases within 45 days. Both sales were reported late.

Shalala, who is responsibl­e for overseeing $500 billion in taxpayer money used for coronaviru­s-related payouts to large businesses, said the unreported stock sales were part of an ongoing deferredco­mpensation agreement with Tegna. Shalala served on the board of Gannett, a newspaper company, from 2001 through 2011. In 2015, Tegna was spun off from Gannett, and Shalala’s deferred compensati­on for her board work was under the umbrella of the new company.

Shalala spokespers­on Carlos Condarco said the plan “operates similarly to a pension” and that “neither the congresswo­man nor her advisers receive notificati­on when these shares are sold. They don’t manage the assets in the plan or receive notices of sale.”

According to Shalala’s financial disclosure­s, she also receives income each year from Tegna as part of her deferred-compensati­on agreement. In 2018, Shalala received $29,151. In 2019, she received $45,350. The deferred=compensati­on agreement is in place through 2026.

Stock sales are also part of the agreement. Shalala said she was unaware that Tegna stock was sold on her behalf as part of the agreement and only discovered the transactio­n when her lawyer was compiling income informatio­n for her annual financial disclosure, which was due in August.

“This came to light because her advisers she relies on weren’t monitoring this closely,” Condarco said.

Condarco said Shalala’s adviser filed the additional transactio­n report in July and that the congresswo­man was aware of the report’s existence, but she was not aware that the report contained a STOCK Act violation.

Shalala’s stock transactio­ns have become an issue in her reelection campaign against Republican Maria Elvira Salazar for Florida’s 27th Congressio­nal District. The district includes most of Miami and Miami Beach.

Condarco said the timing of Tegna stock sales is done without Shalala’s knowledge once a year. The 2020 stock sale valued between $1,00115,000 occurred the same week that a potential Tegna takeover bid fell through due to revenue concerns amid the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Shalala paid a $1,200 fine to the House Ethics Committee in April for six STOCK Act violations because she failed to report hundreds of transactio­ns made last year by a broker setting up a blind trust. The penalty for violating STOCK Act disclosure requiremen­ts is a $200 fine for every missed disclosure. Condarco said Shalala hasn’t talked to the Ethics Committee regarding her latest report.

There is no indication that Shalala engaged in insider trading, though her stock holdings on her previous financial disclosure, from 2018, led to criticism from left-leaning outlets that her portfolio conflicted with her work on a congressio­nal committee set up to oversee $500 billion in taxpayer money being used for coronaviru­s-related payouts to large businesses.

Shalala served as secretary of Health and Human Services in the Bill Clinton administra­tion and as the University of Miami’s president before entering Congress in 2019.

Shalala beat Salazar in 2018 by six percentage points and is favored to win reelection in a district that leans Democratic, though Salazar has the financial resources to mount a serious campaign.

Shalala

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