Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Bass boat roiling campaign waters

Secretary of state candidates spar over state-funded $22,000 purchase

- HUNTER FIELD

A $22,000 boat purchased on the state’s dime entered the debate on Wednesday in the race for Arkansas’ next secretary of state.

Susan Inman, the Democratic candidate, criticized her Republican opponent, Commission­er of State Lands John Thurston, for spending nearly $27,000 on the boat and accessorie­s and more on storage and maintenanc­e. The boat was purchased in 2014.

Thurston, who is running for secretary of state after reaching the two-term limit as land commission­er, said the boat was necessary to fulfill the office’s statutory duty of stewarding the state’s navigable waterways and submerged lands.

Inman’s attack came two days after a post on BlueHogRep­ort.com, a left-leaning blog run by attorney Matt Campbell, detailed the spending by Thurston’s office on the War Eagle boat. Inman of Little Rock described the boat as a boondoggle, and questioned whether it was purchased for Thurston’s personal pleasure, though she said she hadn’t seen any evidence of that.

“Regardless of that, it was a terrible, ill-thought-out purchase and unnecessar­y,” Inman said.

Thurston said the attack was silly, and the boat had

never been used for fishing or any other personal use. He said if an employee did use it for that, he would be fired immediatel­y.

Thurston, of the East End community in Saline County, said the office had traditiona­lly relied on the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission to provide boats to investigat­e potential waterway issues, but the office was at the mercy of the commission’s schedule. That issue, coupled with a new law passed in 2013 that extended the land commission­er’s authority to initiate legal actions to remove structure or debris from navigable waterways, prompted Thurston and his staff to take a more proactive approach.

Inman’s attack, Thurston said, is an attempt to smear his record from a “weak, low-inthe-polls candidate.”

“It’s D.C. politics; that’s all it is,” said Thurston, who was first elected in 2010. “Smear and tell half the facts.”

In addition to overseeing navigable waters and submerged lands, the commission­er of state lands is also responsibl­e for collecting delinquent real estate taxes that are uncollecta­ble at the county level; auctioning tax delinquent land; and having jurisdicti­on over mineral rights on state lands.

According to records initially obtained through a public records request by Campbell and later provided to the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Thurston’s office paid $22,477.65 on Dec. 4, 2014, for a War Eagle model 860LDSV, described on the company’s website as a hunting and fishing v-hull boat.

The office also spent close to $4,500 on accessorie­s, including a $2,299.99 depth finder, and between $1,500 and $1,800 annually for storage.

In response to emailed questions, Thurston’s office identified six instances when the boat had been used. He personally participat­ed in two survey trips on the Ouachita River and Little Maumelle River, and staff also went on additional survey trips on the Ouachita River, Arkansas River/Murray Lake area, Little Maumelle River and Norfork River.

Diane Schratz, general counsel in the land commission­er’s office, said that at the time the boat was purchased, the office had seen an uptick in waterway complaints.

“At the time of the purchase of the boat, the houseboat in the Little Maumelle River had just been removed, and we had an increase in the number of complaints we were receiving,” Schratz said. “Our intent was to be able to act upon complaints quickly because the situation with the houseboat removal proved that the longer time elapsed, the more entrenched the debris had become, making it more dangerous and removal more difficult.”

Campbell in his blog post and Inman during her Wednesday news conference questioned the necessity of the boat since it hasn’t been used often since being purchased.

“It’s unnecessar­y,” Inman said. “He didn’t have to buy this.”

Thurston said the boat is mostly used when the office receives complaints, which he can’t control.

“I can’t predict if there’s going to be one complaint or 10 this year,” Thurston said. “I do know that I’m not going to burden another agency and their staff to help me do my job.”

All the supplies purchased for the boat were to help research and investigat­e issues while on the water and to ensure the safety of those on board, Thurston said.

The election is Nov. 6. In addition to Thurston and Inman, Libertaria­n Christophe­r Olson of Viola is also running for secretary of state.

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