The Morning Call

Shapiro to keep accepting tickets from group that gets state money

- By Stephen Caruso and Katie Meyer Spotlight PA

HARRISBURG — Gov. Josh Shapiro plans to continue accepting perks like tickets to sporting events from a nonprofit that receives state money despite concerns he may be violating his own gift ban.

The nonprofit in question is Team Pennsylvan­ia, a public-private partnershi­p that says it works to improve the commonweal­th’s “competitiv­eness and economic prosperity.” This year it paid for tickets and lodgings for Shapiro, a Democrat, to attend the Super Bowl in Arizona, and funded his tickets to a Philadelph­ia Phillies playoff game and a Penn State football game.

In the latter instances, the administra­tion defended the trips as a chance to “attend the game with business leaders to discuss economic developmen­t and job creation” and to celebrate “the work [of ] one of the Commonweal­th’s most important universiti­es,” respective­ly.

The administra­tion did not proactivel­y disclose who paid for the tickets; Spotlight PA requested that informatio­n from a spokespers­on.

One expert told Spotlight PA earlier this year that taking tickets from Team PA could conflict with Shapiro’s gift ban, which bars executive branch employees from accepting goods or services, like tickets, from any “person or entity” that “has financial relations with the Commonweal­th.”

Team PA receives money from the commonweal­th. Just this year, the nonprofit was awarded $1.8 million in taxpayer money from three new contracts, including $1.2 million to study hydrogen technology. The rest is to develop an economic developmen­t plan for the state.

The gift policy Shapiro signed doesn’t say who is supposed to monitor staff

ers and officials for potential violations, nor does the governor’s code of conduct, which predates his administra­tion. The code of conduct says only that people covered who don’t comply “shall be subjected to disciplina­ry action including, but not limited to, reprimands, suspension­s, and terminatio­n.”

Shapiro’s decision to tap Team PA for tickets isn’t unique. The group has existed since 1997, and has paid for expensive trips and outings for multiple Pennsylvan­ia governors. The Shapiro administra­tion has made clear that it doesn’t oppose that relationsh­ip.

“It’s a really important collaborat­ion,” administra­tion spokespers­on Manuel Bonder said, noting Team PA’s long history. “[It’s] certainly one that we expect will continue so that the governor can partake in moments and opportunit­ies to promote Pennsylvan­ia at no cost to taxpayers.”

Important mission or ‘absurd’ perk?

Rich Hudic, who was executive director of Team PA for a decade after its founding in 2001, agreed that the sporting events were within the organizati­on’s scope.

“It is important for the Governor to represent Pennsylvan­ia as our cheerleade­r, champion and ambassador both nationally and internatio­nally,” Hudic said in an email, “so it is entirely consistent with Team PA’s mission we created many years ago.”

Beyond the possible gift ban violation, critics argue the relationsh­ip is problemati­c.

Tim Potts, a former Democratic state House legislativ­e staffer turned good government advocate, argued that Team PA gives its donors an inside track to accessing the Shapiro administra­tion without any transparen­cy or accountabi­lity. The nonprofit’s list of investors includes Deloitte, IBEW District 3, Penn State Health and Shell.

“Citizens have a right to know who is influencin­g public officials, how, and for what purpose,” Potts said in an email. “Without that informatio­n, people are rightly skeptical that public policy and taxpayer dollars are really serving the public interest.”

Michael Pollack, who heads the good government group March on Harrisburg and frequently lobbies for increased transparen­cy in government, including a gift ban, thinks Shapiro’s decision to accept tickets from Team PA was “truly absurd.”

He added that Shapiro’s behavior isn’t particular­ly egregious for Harrisburg, which is notorious for its lax rules around gifts and campaign finance. But Pollack said he expected Shapiro to be more cautious, noting that it’s well known that the governor has higher political ambitions.

Pollack predicted these issues will likely come up again. Legislatio­n that would restrict gifts is perennial in Harrisburg and often gets buried by lawmakers.

“He should prioritize issues that earn the trust of the people of Pennsylvan­ia,” Pollack said.

‘Understand the appearance’

The administra­tion’s use of Team PA for event tickets isn’t the only transparen­cy-related practice that has raised eyebrows during Shapiro’s first year in office.

Shapiro had his gubernator­ial transition team sign unusually strict nondisclos­ure agreements and declined to publicize the private donors who funded his inaugural festivitie­s — a departure from at least two immediate predecesso­rs. He also decided to keep his daily schedule secret and relaxed former Democratic Gov.

Tom Wolf’s (notoriousl­y strict) gift ban.

Plus, the administra­tion quietly settled a sexual harassment complaint against Mike Vereb, a top staffer and one of Shapiro’s oldest political allies. Spotlight PA learned of the settlement after Vereb’s abrupt resignatio­n in September, and a public records request revealed that it cost the commonweal­th nearly $300,000 and included a confidenti­ality clause that barred both sides from discussing the allegation­s.

Asked about these decisions, from Shapiro’s private schedule to the settlement, Bonder said the issue was being “frankly, somewhat raised in bad faith.”

“We are responsive. We’re accessible,” he said. “He does events at a very high pace all across Pennsylvan­ia and answers questions from any media that shows up.”

Ed Rendell, who served as Pennsylvan­ia governor from 2003 to 2011 and has known Shapiro for decades, took a more nuanced view of transparen­cy questions.

The Democrat also sometimes took advantage of the commonweal­th’s lax gift laws during his tenure. But while he sees these as “inside baseball” issues that constituen­ts don’t think about much, Rendell said he doesn’t dismiss them.

Optics on things like gifts are important, he noted, and Shapiro “has got to understand the appearance of it.”

“He’ll learn,” Rendell said.

This story first appeared in The Investigat­or, a weekly newsletter by Spotlight PA featuring the best investigat­ive and accountabi­lity journalism from across Pennsylvan­ia. Sign up for free.

BEFORE YOU GO… If you learned something from this article, pay it forward and contribute to Spotlight PA at spotlightp­a.org/donate. Spotlight PA is funded by foundation­s and readers like you who are committed to accountabi­lity journalism that gets results.

 ?? COMMONWEAL­TH MEDIA SERVICES ?? Gov. Josh Shapiro and his family attended a Philadelph­ia Phillies baseball game during the playoffs in Oct. 2023.
COMMONWEAL­TH MEDIA SERVICES Gov. Josh Shapiro and his family attended a Philadelph­ia Phillies baseball game during the playoffs in Oct. 2023.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States