Monday, November 24, 2014
State and Local Stories
Virginia lawmakers are subject to little oversight beyond their own consciences when balancing their own interests against the public's, the Daily Press found during a monthslong review of thousands of pages of campaign finance reports, financial disclosure forms and property records. Virginia sets few ethics rules for legislators and, unlike most states, sets no limits on the money they accept for their campaign funds and political action committees. Virginia's approach is to rely on the disclosure forms legislators must file with the State Board of Elections and clerks of the House of Delegates or state Senate. The argument is that telling the public about the money they earn, and the money they accept, is the best way to ensure that legislators act in the public interest, and not in their own. But Virginia doesn't ask legislators to tell the public very much.
Daily Press (part 8 of 8)
Sometimes, spending time in the lush green of Capitol Square — or even leaving it — isn't such a bad deal for Virginia's part-time legislators. Especially since it can be such a good place for making connections. Glenn Oder, who represented much of midtown Newport News in the House of Delegates for a decade, for instance, landed a new job after his first year in office, earning more than $10,000 working for Kaufman and Canoles Consulting, a job he held for seven years, until 2009. How much more than $10,000 didn't need to be disclosed under state ethics law as it was written then. Politics in Virginia has become a career boost for many in the General Assembly — and plenty of Virginia's legislators make a nice living in the game and afterward, a Daily Press review of the business affairs of state legislators past and present shows.
Daily Press (part 7 of 8)
To report The Virginia Way, an 8-part series, the Daily Press looked at roughly 200 current and former elected officials' financial disclosure forms and campaign finance reports from the past two decades, as well as data from Freedom of Information Act requests with the clerks of the state Senate and House of Delegates and the state Department of Accounts. The paper also examined public records of real estate and business holdings, lobbyist disclosures with both the Virginia Secretary of the Commonwealth and the Clerk of the U.S. House of Representatives, and surveyed all 140 current members of the General Assembly for details about allowances and benefits received from the state, though only a few dozen replied.
Daily Press
A civil liberties group contends Virginia's attorney general's office is not following steps outlined in state law to provide insight into the gathering of telephone records by policedepartments and sheriff's offices statewide. For at least 10 years, the attorney general's office has been submitting required annual reports to the General Assembly only about wiretaps, a rare kind of intercept that records actual phone conversations. But the reports are silent on the much more prevalent court orders that police agencies use to obtain past call log records and live access to data about a phone's activity — such as the phone numbers being dialed out and calling in.
Daily Press
Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe had run out of options to pull off his marquee campaign promise to expand Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act. Even a risky plan to circumvent the legislature had fallen apart. That’s when the governor, his top priority defeated, picked up the phone and called the man he blamed for the catastrophe. “Hey, Phil? Terry McAuliffe,” the governor said in a seething voice message to Phillip P. Puckett, a Southwest Virginia Democrat who had quit the state Senate days earlier, throwing control of it to the GOP. “I want you to know we just lost the vote, 20 to 19, in the Senate. Medicaid is done. I hope you sleep easy tonight, buddy.”
Washington Post
A dispute over attendance at a state conference has erupted between two outgoing Front Royal Town Council members. Councilman Thomas Sayre came under fire for seeking reimbursement after he attended the Virginia Municipal League’s annual conference at The Doubletree Hotel in Roanoke in early October. A fellow councilman complained that Sayre attended part of the conference without registering and then asked that the town reimburse him for the expenses. Town Council plans to discuss the conference matter at a work session after its regular meeting Monday. Sayre did not register for the conference, according to information provided by the town, but did receive reimbursement for $245.75 to cover travel and other expenses. Mary Jo Fields, VML director of research, confirmed Friday that she gave Sayre permission to visit the exhibit hall and go on the mayors walk at the conference.
Northern Virginia Daily
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