The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Payout for House rep is disgusting

It’s bad enough that $248,000 in Pennsylvan­ia taxpayers’ money funded a sexual-harassment settlement involving a longtime member of the state House of Representa­tives.

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It’s bad enough that $248,000 in taxpayers’ money went to settle a sexualhara­ssment claim.

What many state residents might consider worse is that it has taken two years for the payment to see “the light of day.”

Transparen­cy should have ruled regarding the settlement from the day it was paid, not secrecy.

Beyond that, there apparently have been other settlement­s, for reasons not fully disclosed, for which taxpayers also have doled out hundreds of thousands of dollars since 2007.

Taxpayers have a right to know the details of those “transactio­ns.”

The $248,000 that was paid out in 2015 was on behalf of Democratic Rep. Tom Caltagiron­e, who has represente­d the Reading area for four decades.

Claims of sexual harassment targeting Caltagiron­e were filed by an unidentifi­ed woman who was described as a legislativ­e assistant in the lawmaker’s district office.

Of the total amount paid in the Caltagiron­e case, $165,500 went to the woman and $82,500 to her lawyer.

The Philadelph­ia Inquirer and Pittsburgh Post-Gazette were the first to report on a document tied to the settlement.

That document, prepared by the state’s Bureau of Risk and Insurance Management, said House Democrats in 2015 had authorized the payments.

On Dec.19, the Associated Press obtained what was described as a “sovereign immunity-tort claims settlement memorandum and invoice” connected to Caltagiron­e, bearing the signatures of House Democratic chief counsel Nora Winkelman and the state’s risk and insurance management director.

The form indicated that the woman initially had sought $1.5 million under “a complaint of discrimina­tion, among other things,” under a federal law banning discrimina­tion based on sex, race, color, national origin and religion.

On the basis of what was sought compared with what was paid, the taxpayers got a bargain.

However, the fact that any taxpayers’ money was used for the settlement was an affront to the people of this state.

Then surfaced more cause for taxpayer anger when, late on Dec. 19, House Minority Leader Frank Dermody, DAllegheny, revealed that the House Democratic Caucus had agreed to pay out $514,000 since 2007 to settle claims filed by employees.

According to Dermody, two claims alleged sexual harassment by two House members and five involved other types of employment issues.

In an email since the Caltagiron­e case surfaced, Winkelman acknowledg­ed that she had “submitted (and signed) several requests over the years on behalf of the caucus” for payment from the state Department of General Services under the commonweal­th’s self-insured liability insurance plan in which the House participat­es.

Considerin­g the many sexual harassment allegation­s that have surfaced on the federal government level and in the entertainm­ent industry — and the public disgust that those incidents has spawned — Gov. Tom Wolf had little recourse but to call for Caltagiron­e’s resignatio­n.

Indeed, Caltagiron­e should resign for the blot he has inflicted, not only on himself but on the House — and on state government in general. An apology isn’t enough. Hopefully, there won’t have to be any more payments.

But if there ever are, they should be reported to the public immediatel­y, along with the name of the person or persons whose alleged wrongdoing made those payments necessary.

No more two-year informatio­n “blackouts.”

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