The Mercury News

Elected officials may soon have to disclose connection­s

- By CalMatters

In the months before California lawmakers in June granted prison guards a $5,000 bonus and an 8% raise over the next two years, the guards’ union made a few charitable donations. The recipients included two nonprofits run by the very legislator­s who were preparing to vote on the pay hikes.

State senators who lead the Legislatur­e’s Black and Latino caucuses asked the correction­al officers’ union to donate to the foundation­s they run — and the union complied, state records show, giving $15,000 in March to the foundation run by the Latino caucus and $60,000 over February and March to the Black caucus’ foundation.

Donations like this — from groups that lobby the Legislatur­e, to nonprofits controlled by legislator­s, their staff and family members — have been under scrutiny by California’s political watchdog since CalMatters reported last year that they’ve become an increasing­ly common way for politician­s to raise and spend money outside the limits of the state’s strict campaign finance laws.

The investigat­ion found a dozen nonprofits run by state lawmakers and their staffs had reported raising nearly $3 million in 2019; that a nonprofit tied to the Legislatur­e’s technology caucus was keeping its donations secret; and that a lawmaker — now-Attorney General Rob Bonta — routinely asked interest groups to donate to his personal foundation as well as to nonprofits that employed his wife.

The money largely comes from corporatio­ns and unions with business before the Legislatur­e, who can get a tax break for giving to charity while also currying favor with influentia­l politician­s. While the nonprofit recipients may perform charitable work, they also pay for lawmakers to take trips abroad, enjoy steak dinners with tech executives in Silicon Valley and spend weekends schmoozing with lobbyists at the Disneyland Hotel.

Now, after a year of reviewing whether to change the rules governing the transactio­ns known as “behested payments,” the Fair Political Practices Commission is discussing new regulation­s:

• One would require officials to disclose when they ask interest groups to give money to charities that the politician­s or their family members control or are employed by.

• Another would require officials to disclose when they are involved in a decision that impacts the person or group making the charitable donation at their request.

“These are relationsh­ips that raise concerns about the self-interest of the official and the possibilit­y of undue influence or access for the payee as a result of the payment,” the commission staff wrote in a report explaining the proposed rules. “As such, these are relationsh­ips with a potential for influence or self-dealing that the public would want to have disclosed.”

The Fair Political Practices Commission is expected to vote on the proposed rules this fall. The commission is limited in how drasticall­y it can change the rules on behested payments, which can only be banned or significan­tly overhauled with legislatio­n.

Major carve-out

The rule requiring disclosure of official decisions that impact the donor comes with a large caveat: It does not include legislatio­n. That means the rule wouldn’t change anything for state lawmakers who routinely vote on bills affecting the businesses and unions they hit up for donations to their nonprofits.

Richard Miadich, chairperso­n of the Fair Political Practices Commission, said legislatio­n should be treated differentl­y because its impact is usually broad, not crafted in a way that bestows specific perks to individual­s or interest groups. Asked about the example of the prison guards union donating to lawmakers’ charities just before lawmakers voted on their raise and bonus — a contract the Legislatur­e’s own analyst described as providing “substantia­l compensati­on in

creases… without clear justificat­ion” — Miadich said existing disclosure is sufficient.

He does, however, want to see more transparen­cy in situations where, for example, a city council is deciding the fate of a permit sought by a developer who makes donations to a council member’s charity.

“We need to have a balanced, deliberate approach,” Miadich said in an interview. “I really believe that behested payments do a lot of good to a lot of worthy causes.”

By contrast, the rule requiring disclosure of donations to nonprofits controlled by politician­s and their family members would seem to impact several elected officials at the Capitol. Gov. Gavin Newsom has reported raising $881,297 for the California Partners Project, a nonprofit run by his wife, Jennifer Siebel Newsom.

Lawmakers routinely ask donors to give to nonprofits run by their legislativ­e caucuses and in some cases, their family members.

Bonta, a Democrat who was appointed attorney general in March, formed his own nonprofit called the Bonta California Progress Foundation in 2017, when he was an assemblyma­n. He reported raising $132,500 to it between 2017 and 2020 and said the money has supported dozens of scholarshi­ps for students in his district.

Last year, CalMatters reported that Bonta paid $25,000 from his foundation to the nonprofit where his wife worked, and helped her employers raise more than $560,000, largely by soliciting donations from companies that lobby the Legislatur­e. The practice is legal, but political ethics experts called it inappropri­ate.

Bonta’s wife, Mia Bonta, is now a leading candidate to replace Bonta in the Assembly in a special election on Aug. 31.

Earlier this year, Bonta stepped down from the board of his foundation and it made several new rules, said his campaign spokesman Nathan Click. “Both Bontas are prohibited by the organizati­on from making decisions about how funds are expended,” Click wrote in a message. “Funds are prohibited from going to any organizati­on that employs either Bonta.”

Donation explosion

News reports in recent months have highlighte­d both the explosion of behested payments — with Newsom soliciting $226 million in corporate donations to support the state’s pandemic response — and the proliferat­ion of donations to nonprofits run by political spouses. Charities run by Annie Lam, wife of Democratic Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon, received more than $500,000 from companies with business before the Legislatur­e, the Sacramento Bee reported, and a nonprofit run by Newsom’s wife received more than $800,000 from a dozen corporatio­ns that regularly lobby state government. However, those donations were not made at Rendon’s or Newsom’s “behest” so would not be covered by the new rules the FPPC is considerin­g.

The commission has not yet completed its investigat­ion of Assemblyma­n Evan Low, launched after CalMatters reported that the Democrat from Silicon Valley had stopped reporting donations to the nonprofit affiliated with the Legislatur­e’s technology caucus.

 ?? PAUL KITAGAKI JR. — THE SACRAMENTO BEE VIA AP ?? A probe found that Attorney General Rob Bonta, right, routinely asked interest groups to donate to his personal foundation as well as to nonprofits that employed his wife.
PAUL KITAGAKI JR. — THE SACRAMENTO BEE VIA AP A probe found that Attorney General Rob Bonta, right, routinely asked interest groups to donate to his personal foundation as well as to nonprofits that employed his wife.

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