Gift Ban Legislation To Get Second Chance As Wolf Pushes Own Ethics Reform


Credit: Wikimedia
Credit: Wikimedia

By Andrew Staub | PA Independent

Gov.-electย Tom Wolfย has already asked his transition team to sign a code of conduct prohibitingย members from accepting gifts, and he plans to implement a similar banย for the executive branch when he takes office Jan. 20.

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Wolfโ€™s Fresh Startย policy planย indicates the rule will be simple: โ€œJust say no thanks.โ€

For now, the General Assembly has said no thanks to a gift ban of its own โ€”ย wrapping up the current session without implementing theย ban despite an embarrassing scandal inย Philadelphia โ€” but thatย may change.

State Sen.ย Lloyd Smucker, R-Lancaster, said Wolf โ€œsent the right signal about the importance of public integrityโ€ and believes that the Legislature should do the same by barring state lawmakers and state employees from accepting any gifts and hospitality from lobbyists and those who employ them.

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โ€œNothingโ€™s easier than saying we just simply cannot take anything,โ€ said Smucker, who intends to introduce gift ban legislation when the new session starts next month.

While Smucker said the bill is still in draft form and could change as it moves through the Legislature, it would impose a $10,000 fine, up to five years in prison or both in the case of violations.

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Such a law would be a drastic change for Pennsylvania, one of 10 states, Smucker says, without restrictions on gifts. Public officials can dine out, play golf and take in ball games courtesy of lobbyists, as long as they disclose gifts of more than $250 and hospitality; lodging and transportation of more than $650.

Itโ€™s a culture,ย Smucker said, that โ€œgoes well beyond the standard interaction with constituents that most people find acceptable.โ€

Lawmakers can also legally accept cash gifts โ€” something that surprised many lawmakers, said Smucker, who doesnโ€™t think disclosure is enough to guard against corruption. So far, though, efforts to change the system have stalled.

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The state Senate in April approved legislation banning cash gifts after a handful of lawmakers were caught on tape accepting cash from a lobbyist helping an Attorney General sting operation. But the House never sent the bill to Gov. Tom Corbett, who has been criticized for taking thousands of dollarsโ€™ inย gifts during his tenure.

Corbettโ€™s successor has taken a hard-line against such perks of public office. Wolf plans to sign an executive order his first day in office banning gifts for all members of the executive branch, said Jeffrey Sheridan, Wolfโ€™sย press secretary.

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โ€œPeople are allowed to take gifts as long as they report them, and that shouldnโ€™t be OK,โ€ Sheridan said. โ€œA huge reason why Tom ran for governor was to restore the public trust in government.โ€

A gift ban could beย a pivotal moment for reform efforts. Eric Epstein of the reform-group Rock the Capital compared it to an infantโ€™s progression from crawling to walking, saying if a gift ban is instituted maybeย lawmakers would address their generous per diem, cost-of-living adjustments and other perks.

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Gift-ban legislation could also serve as a chance for the Democrat Wolf and the Republican Legislature to start on common ground, Epstein said.

โ€œThis is more than symbolic, but itโ€™s going to take a heroic effort to get it done. Money never concedes anything without a fight,โ€ Epstein said.

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Case in point: Epstein and other good-government activists tried to shame lawmakers into passing a gift ban, showering them with fake bribes during one publicity stunt earlier this year.

Nothing changed.

Smucker and other lawmakers wereย working to develop gift-ban legislationย โ€”ย including hosting a hearing on the topicย โ€” but he said they ran short on time while working out the kinks of the bill, including examining exemptions.

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The legislation Smucker intends to introduce would include carve-outs for family members to give gifts to public officials and allow lawmakers to accept gifts of fewer than $50 from non-lobbyists, such as constituents who want to offer a token of appreciation.

โ€œItโ€™s awkward at times to say no to something like that,โ€ Smucker said.

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Whether lawmakers embrace the reform this time around remains to be seen, but Sheridan said Wolf is looking forward to working with the General Assembly to institute โ€œcomprehensive ethics reform that will cover all of state government.โ€

Smuckerโ€™s bill could be a chance to codify Wolfโ€™s โ€œno thank youโ€ rule or something close to it. With the next governor pushing change, the legislation could gain traction, Epstein said.

โ€œNothingโ€™s lost by trying,โ€ he said. โ€œItโ€™s difficult for me to believe that the Legislatureโ€™s polling numbers could get any lower by passing a ban on cash and gifts.โ€