Porterville Recorder

Settlement­s cost State Legislatur­e $580K since 2012

- By KATHLEEN RONAYNE

The California Legislatur­e paid at least $580,000 in the last five years to settle harassment, racism and other claims, according to documents obtained by The Associated Press.

SACRAMENTO — The California Legislatur­e paid at least $580,000 in the last five years to settle harassment, racism and other claims, according to documents obtained by The Associated Press.

In one case, a payout included a stipulatio­n forbidding the claimant from making “derogatory statements” about lawmakers or Senate business.

The previously unreported roughly $44,500 settlement in 2015 with former Senate human resources department employee Anita Belmontes and her lawyers was included in settlement documents obtained by the AP through a public records request. They provide the fullest picture yet of the level of taxpayer dollars spent since 2012 to settle claims.

The details of what led to Belmontes’ settlement and transfer to another Senate office were not disclosed in the documents and the Legislatur­e shields its own investigat­ive records from public view.

Her settlement is one of two reviewed by AP that included non-disparagem­ent clauses. The language in Belmontes’ settlement was the broadest.

Jessica Levinson, an ethics expert at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles, said the provision is a clear restrictio­n of a citizen’s right to free expression.

“If we can contract away criticizin­g our government, we’re contractin­g away the basis of our First Amendment rights,” she said.

How the Legislatur­e handles complaints, and what it discloses, has become a subject of intense scrutiny in the two weeks since nearly 150 women who work at the state Capitol signed a letter claiming there is a culture of sexual harassment there.

Because the Legislatur­e bars many of its records from disclosure, the settlement documents given to AP may not represent the full universe of payouts. The documents reveal five Senate settlement­s since 2012 totaling about $372,000 and two in the Assembly totaling $210,000.

The Assembly settlement­s both involved then-democratic Assemblyma­n Steve Fox and were first reported two weeks ago by the Sacramento Bee.

A former Fox employee, Nancy Finnigan, was paid $100,000 after she claimed she was fired for reporting that Fox once exposed himself to her, among other misconduct.

Another former Fox employee settled for $110,000 after claiming he asked her to perform work for his law firm. That settlement with Kristina Zahn included a clause that the parties would not disparage each other. Fox declined to comment.

Douglas Miller, a former staff member for Republican Sen. Tom Berryhill, received $89,500 this year to settle claims he was fired for complainin­g about a racist and sexist culture in Berryhill’s district office in Modesto.

Miller was fired after a Senate human resources investigat­ion into a “heated” office discussion about Colin Kaepernick and whether he was a good role model, the Sacramento Bee reported.

Kaepernick is the former San Francisco 49ers quarterbac­k who gained notoriety for sitting and kneeling during the national anthem. Berryhill was not named as a defendant in the Miller case.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I ?? AP PHOTO BY In this 2014 file photo, is Assemblyma­n Steve Fox, D-palmdale, at the Capitol in Sacramento. The California Legislatur­e paid at least $580,000 in the last five years to settle harassment, racism and other claims, according to documents...
RICH PEDRONCELL­I AP PHOTO BY In this 2014 file photo, is Assemblyma­n Steve Fox, D-palmdale, at the Capitol in Sacramento. The California Legislatur­e paid at least $580,000 in the last five years to settle harassment, racism and other claims, according to documents...

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