The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

LOBBYIST SPENDING DROPS SINCE 2011

- SOURCE: STATE ETHICS COMMISSION

2011 2012 2013 2014 $1,821,903 $1,382,000 $921,279 $736,933 ly combine forces, splitting the cost of pricey dinners to keep officials from exceeding the cap, the AJC discovered by analyzing reports submitted to the state ethics commission.

On Jan. 28, seven senators, including President Pro Temp David Shafer and Rules Chairman Jeff Mullis, attended a dinner paid for by Georgia EMC and Oglethorpe Power. The total was more than $800, but no senator eclipsed the $75 mark because of how lobbyists split the tab.

Among those at the dinner was freshman Sen. Greg Kirk, RAmericus, who said he has accepted dinner invitation­s from a variety of lobbyists as a way to learn the ropes and rub elbows with legislativ­e leaders.

“Each one is different,” he said in an interview earlier this month. “Gosh, I’ve been to two this week. Both of them there was some (legislativ­e) leadership there.”

Kirk said he thinks people misunderst­and the relationsh­ip between lawmakers and lobbyists.

“Lobbyists play a role up here that I didn’t really understand until I was elected. They help educate us on what the issues are,” he said. “If we didn’t have lobbyists, then who would we depend on to educate us on the needs of the different things? It would be your bureaucrat­s mostly.”

When asked why he had to accept gratuities from lobbyists to gain their insights, Kirk said it’s tradition.

“What do you do when you ask a date out? Dinner and a movie. It’s part of our culture,” he said. “I think it’s a cultural thing. It’s the lobbyists’ way to take it one step further.”

Kirk’s dinner came to $117.69, but two Georgia EMC and one Oglethorpe lobbyist split it at $39.23 each. Kirk said he was unaware of the cost of the meal — “I never see the prices,” he said — and could not remember the specifics of the dinner.

“I’ve been to so many,” he said.

AJC finds violations

The loopholes in the cap make it hard to violate the law. Still, it happens.

On Jan. 28, the same day Shafer, Kirk and other legislator­s were being entertaine­d by Georgia EMC and Ogelthorpe Power, a lobbyist representi­ng banking giant Synovus took House Banking Chairman Greg Morris, R-Vidalia, out to dinner at Nino’s, an Italian restaurant in the Morningsid­e area of north Atlanta. Morris’ meal topped $88 and came just ahead of the introducti­on of House Bill 184, a bill co-sponsored by Morris which revises the state’s banking regulation laws.

Morris said he was surprised the meal cost that much.

“I couldn’t imagine that it cost $88, but I don’t know,” he said. The lobbyist was Pete Robinson, a former legislator and powerful voice at the Capitol.

Morris said he and Robinson are longtime friends and that conversati­on at the dinner was general in nature and included talk about their common interest in Brewton-Parker College in Mount Vernon. Greg said he would write Robinson a check for the dinner “just so there is no misunderst­anding.”

A week earlier, the lobbyist for ValueOptio­ns, which last year signed an administra­tive services contract with the Georgia Department of Behavioral Services valued at up to $200 million over eight years, treated Rep. Pat Gardner, D-Atlanta, to a dinner valued at $118.92. Gardner, who sits on the House Appropriat­ions Health Subcommitt­ee, said she took the dinner to discuss Fulton County’s needs under the contract, but she said she did not see the check.

“I do remember the dinner,” she said. “I can’t believe it was this expensive.”

Gardner said she would reimburse the lobbyist for the cost of the dinner. The AJC reviewed ethics records last week and found both lobbyists had filed amended reports reflecting the promised reimbursem­ents.

Room for improvemen­t

In general, McKoon said lawmakers are much more careful about which invitation­s they accept because of the $75 cap and increased scrutiny of lobbyists’ gifts.

In 2011, his first year in the Senate, McKoon said he was invited by another senator to join him at an Atlanta Thrashers hockey game.

“You are coming from the real world and you are thinking, ‘OK, this is a friend of mine asking me to a game,’” he said. Only when he got there did he re- alize the entire event was paid for by a lobbyist. “You suddenly realize, ‘Oh, this is something altogether different from what I was expecting,’” he said.

That doesn’t happen in the current environmen­t because lawmakers know the practice is more closely scrutinize­d, he said. Today “it’s definitely very clear,” he said.

So far this session, McKoon has had three modestly priced lunches and one drink at lobbyists’ expense with a combined total of $73.55. Others, like House Speaker David Ralston, have sworn off lobbyist gifts entirely.

McKoon said he thinks there is opportunit­y to follow up on the “relatively modest reforms” that instituted the $75 cap. He said it is time again for state leaders to begin the work of making themselves more transparen­t and accountabl­e by strengthen­ing the state’s conflict of interest laws and expanding laws governing open meetings and open records.

“I’m working on some things, but I’m also realistic,” he said.

Kirk, the freshman senator from Americus, said he thinks he will whittle down the number of lobbyist-funded events that he attends as he gets more comfortabl­e in the job.

“I could see me getting it down to no more than once a week,” he said. “First of all, I’m not a late-night person.”

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