Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Gov. Tom Wolf announces ethics reform initiative,

- By Kate Giammarise Kate Giammarise: kgiammaris­e@post-gazette. or 412-263-3909. Twitter @KateGiamma­rise.

Under a proposal put forth Monday by Gov. Tom Wolf, public officials would be subject to a gift ban, new campaign finance limits would be enacted, lawmakers would need to provide receipts for reimbursem­ents, and top state officials wouldn’t be paid until a complete budget is passed every year.

Mr. Wolf, a Democrat, unveiled his proposed reforms at a news conference at the Allegheny County Courthouse in Downtown, along with Allegheny County Executive Rich Fitzgerald.

No legislator­s were in attendance and the governor said he anticipate­d the proposals would face opposition.

“This proposal will hold all public officials accountabl­e to their constituen­ts and make sure our citizens know exactly who’s in charge in Harrisburg,” he said.

His “Citizens First” sixpoint ethics plan also called for broader provisions to discourage “pay to play,” such as requiring disclosure of campaign contributi­ons made by parties seeking state contracts. The governor also suggested additional transparen­cy for legislator­s who have outside income, requiring disclosure of sources, type of work and amount of income received.

Currently, lawmakers must disclose sources of outside income above $1,300 annually, though they don’t have to say how much they earn. They must also disclose certain expensive gifts, tickets, transporta­tion and meals. The governor is proposing a gift ban.

A number of similar proposals have been floated before, particular­ly in the wake of scandals or budget impasses — such as not paying lawmakers while a budget remains unfinished — but haven’t gained traction.

Mr. Wolf said this is the first time he’s proposing the changes. He has already imposed a gift ban on the executive branch. Mr. Wolf, who is independen­tly wealthy, donates his salary to charity.

Republican officials criticized Mr. Wolf’s proposals as election year rhetoric and said not allowing legislator­s to take a salary during a budget stalemate would increase pressure on the Legislatur­e to agree to the governor’s proposals.

“Rather than treating a symptom, we would hope the governor would work to fix the problem and work with us to finish a budget on time,” said Jennifer Kocher, spokeswoma­n for Senate Republican­s.

Stephen Miskin, a spokesman for House Republican­s, said there is support for making government more accountabl­e and said House Republican­s led a change for lobbying reform, which recently became law. He criticized the governor for pontificat­ing, rather than working with legislator­s.

“What has the governor actually done to build consensus?” Mr. Miskin said.

Good government groups, such as Common Cause Pennsylvan­ia and Committee of 70, said they were supportive of the proposals.

“We are pleased to see any initiative to bring further transparen­cy and accountabi­lity to the Commonweal­th, and encourage the Governor and General Assembly to use this opportunit­y — even in an election year — to begin meaningful discussion of the reforms needed to reach a higher level of ethical standard in government,” said a statement from the Committee of 70.

“This proposal will hold all public officials accountabl­e to their constituen­ts and make sure our citizens know exactly who’s in charge in Harrisburg.” — Gov. Tom Wolf

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