August 16, 2012 •
Crossing the Finish Line
Nola Werren talks about participating in Akron’s inaugural Race for the Cure!
In 2010, shortly after I told my daughters—ages 11 and 9 at the time—that I had been diagnosed with breast cancer, we were watching television when an advertisement for the new Seidman Cancer Center at University Hospital in Cleveland came on. I looked at my 9-year-old’s face as she watched the commercial. I knew the word “cancer” would now take on an entirely different meaning when she heard it.
Now, it was personal. She turned to me and asked, “Mommy, why is breast cancer more important than other cancer? Why does it get more attention?” To which I responded, “Maggie, I can tell you the answer in two words: Susan Komen.” “Huh?” she replied. My daughter then got a crash course in patient advocacy, medical research, awareness, education, sisterly love, and yes, even grassroots lobbying. Her eyes got a little wider when I told her that in 2009, the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation [now known as Susan G. Komen for the Cure] illuminated the Great Pyramids at Giza in pink. “Wow!” she replied. “Every cancer needs a Susan Komen.”
So when the Northeast Ohio Affiliate of Susan G. Komen for the Cure announced in 2011 that it would host its inaugural Akron Race for the Cure on Sunday, July 29, 2012, at Firestone Country Club, I knew I would be there.
Little did I know that by then, State and Federal Communications, Inc. would have started its own “Walking Challenge” as part of a fitness initiative and wellness program for its employees. Little did I know that by then, a team consisting of numerous co-workers and their family members would be participating in the Akron Race for the Cure, including Elizabeth Bartz, President and CEO of State and Federal Communications and a 6½ year breast cancer survivor herself. Little did I know that my breast surgeon, Dr. Jessica Partin from Akron General Hospital’s Reflections Breast Health Center, would speak at the Survivor Ceremony and get to meet my daughters (“Mommy, tell Dr. Partin that she has a really great smile!).
But here is what I did know: that when I crossed that finish line, I would be hand-in-hand, arms raised above our heads, with my two daughters and my “rock”—my sister, Christine Tvaroch. We crossed the finish line in honor of the family members, friends, neighbors, and co-workers that have fought the good fight, some winning and unfortunately, some losing their battle with breast cancer. But thanks to Susan G. Komen for the Cure, a breast cancer diagnosis today is no longer a death sentence. And when the second annual Akron Race for the Cure is held in 2013, who knows what might happen? I sure intend on being there to find out!
Above photo courtesy of Karen Schiely. Nola Werren is a Client Specialst at State and Federal Communications.
August 15, 2012 •
Delaware Governor Markell Signs Three Bills to Increase Transparency
Bills will increase lobbyist and campaign finance reporting
Governor Jack Markell signed three bills into law in an attempt to shine more light onto the state’s lobbyist and campaign finance reports.
Senate Bill 185 requires lobbyists to report any direct communication with a public official concerning a bill, resolution, or regulation pending before the general assembly or a state agency. The report will be due within five days of the first direct communication by the lobbyist. The bill also makes electronic registration and reporting mandatory for lobbyists. The new law will go into effect on January 1, 2013.
House Bill 300 requires a political committee to register within 24 hours after it receives any contribution or makes any expenditure that would cause the aggregate contributions or expenditures to exceed $500 during an election period. It will also increase disclosure and reporting requirements for campaign and third-party advertisements. These new requirements will go into effect June 30, 2013.
House Bill 310 increases the penalties and the number of people who can be penalized for late, incomplete, or missing campaign finance reports. These new penalties will go into effect immediately.
August 15, 2012 •
Wednesday News Roundup
Keep up with the latest lobbying, campaign finance, and ethics news with these articles:
Lobbying
“Ethics Watchdogs Planning to Crash Convention Parties” by Elizabeth Flock in U.S. News and World Report.
“Conservative lobby group’s guard shot in D.C.” by The Associated Press on CBS News.
Alabama: “Former lobbyist Jimmie Clements convicted in two-year college corruption case” by Jeremy Gray in the Birmingham News.
Maryland: “Last-minute lobbying intense for gambling expansion” by Earl Kelly in the Capital Gazette.
Campaign Finance
“Romney campaign bars press from Adelson, Ryan ‘finance meeting’” by Justin Sink in The Hill.
New Mexico: “State Senate Dems launch PACs” by The Associated Press in the Santa Fe New Mexican.
West Virginia: “Lawsuit Filed Against Campaign Finance Pilot Program” on WDTV.com.
Ethics
New York: “State pols can’t accept US Open freebies, ethics panel rules” by Sally Goldenberg in the New York Post.
August 14, 2012 •
State and Federal Communications and Stateside Associates Launch Joint Initiative
State and Federal Communications and Stateside Associates have partnered to produce profiles of the key state elections of 2012 and the rules for campaign contributions.
Available free of charge online at www.stateandfed.com, the state profiles include Governor, Attorney General, state Legislative, and Key Ballot Questions. Most recent public polling for Governor and Attorney General races are also featured and will be updated throughout the primary and general election seasons.
The 2012 Elections information also includes charts and maps featuring incumbents, challengers and partisan controls. The state legislative maps illustrate which chambers are within a five vote margin of partisan control.
State and Federal Communications is your premiere compliance information source keeping companies and organizations in the bounds of state and federal compliance law. We assist clients with political contributions, state lobbying, and procurement activities by providing instant and up-to-date information on client compliance.
Stateside Associates is the proven leader in state and local government relations. Since 1988, Stateside Associates has offered clients state, federal and local Issue Management, Legislative Monitoring, Regulatory ForecastingSM, Regulation ALERTSM, Social Media Monitoring for State and Local Government Relations, Local Government Monitoring, Groups Program Management and Lobbyist Management, all of which are grounded in first-hand knowledge and based on serving clients’ unique needs. For more information, visit www.stateside.com.
August 14, 2012 •
Colorado Campaign Finance Rule Changes Invalidated
Additional rule changes await determination
A federal judge has invalidated several campaign finance rule changes made by Secretary of State Scott Gessler. The rules struck down include one providing that organizations are only subject to reporting requirements if more than 30 percent of their spending was for or against a ballot issue, and one that limited penalties for certain campaign finance violations.
The secretary of state’s rule defining electioneering communications was upheld, and two additional rules await a decision.
August 13, 2012 •
Seattle Councilman Proposes Campaign Finance Changes
Bill to limit the advantages for incumbents
Councilman Mike O’Brien has introduced a bill to the city council in hopes of limiting the advantages incumbents currently have in city elections. The bill, which has been placed into committee, would limit the election cycle, limit the time frame a person can raise money for a campaign, and limit the amount of money a candidate may keep at the end of the election cycle.
The new election cycle would start on January 1st of the year that office is up for election and end on April 30th following the general election. Also, a candidate would be forced to get rid of the money in his or her war chest following the end of the election cycle. Councilman O’Brien believes this will limit the advantage an incumbent has over challengers and encourage more people to run for city office.
The bill would take effect 30 days after the mayor signs it, however any money received by a candidate prior to the effective date may be retained until the next election for that office.
August 13, 2012 •
Mayor of Concord Wants Ethics Ordinance Reviewed
Board of Ethics
Concord, New Hampshire Mayor Jim Bouley is calling for a review of the city’s ethics ordinance enacted just last year.
According to the Concorde Monitor, the mayor has requested the city council ask the Board of Ethics to assess the ordinance to “ensure a fair and efficient review of ethics complaints.” Two complaints filed against the mayor were recently dismissed by the board.
The next city council meeting is scheduled for tonight.
August 13, 2012 •
Georgia House Speaker Favors Lobbyist Gift Ban
Hopes to propose and pass legislation early next year
House Speaker David Ralston will propose a full ban on lobbyist gifts to lawmakers when the legislature convenes next year. Last month, voters overwhelmingly supported the idea of capping lobbyist gifts in nonbinding referendums held during the July 31st primaries.
However, Ralston believes capping the value of lobbyist gifts would do little to stem the influence of special interests.
The speaker intends to form a group of House members to study how other states have implemented gift bans with hopes of passing a bill early in the legislative session beginning in January.
August 13, 2012 •
Sponsoring Local NPR Coverage of the National Conventions
State and Federal Communications is proud to sponsor WKSU’s 2012 Democratic and Republican Convention Coverage!
WKSU reporter M.L. Schultze will be covering the Republican National Convention in Tampa, Florida starting on August 27. Reporter Mark Urycki will be covering the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte, North Carolina starting on September 3.
Elizabeth Bartz, president and CEO of State and Federal Communications, has been a long supporter of the station, which is an NPR affiliate and a treasure of Northeast Ohio.
Bartz had this to say: “We are super-psyched to be the sponsor! It is important that our local NPR station has the ability to attend the national conventions.”
Photo of the Democratic National Convention in 2008 by Qqqqqq on Wikipedia.
August 13, 2012 •
Monday Lobbying and Campaign Finance News Roundup
Start your week off right with these news articles:
Lobbying
Georgia: “Exclusive: Ralston to propose total lobbyist gift ban” by Aaron Gould Sheinin and Kristina Torres in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
Indiana: “Ethics rulings say Daniels can lobby for Purdue” by The Associated Press in the Indiana Business Journal.
Campaign Finance
Colorado: “Judge rejects Colorado Secretary of State Scott Gessler’s changes” by Erin Udell in the Denver Post.
Florida: “Unlimited Corporate Money In Fla. Political Races ‘Worries Political Scientists’” by Jessica Palombo on WFSU.org.
Minnesota: “Top state court rules campaign finance laws apply to schools” by Jennifer Brooks in the Minneapolis Star Tribune.
“When is a campaign contribution a bribe?” by Robert Barnes in The Washington Post.
Social Media
“Paul Ryan VP pick adds social media muscle” by Steve Friess in Politico.
Oregon: “More Oregon lawmakers harness power of Twitter, Facebook” by Laura Barron-Lopez in The Oregonian.
August 10, 2012 •
NCSL Announces New Leadership
New lineup for 2012-2013
The National Conference of State Legislatures has announced its leadership team for the upcoming year.
Take a look at their news release found on NCSL’s website: “NCSL Welcomes New Leadership: Norelli, Starr and Spaw set to lead national organization for 2012-13.”
August 10, 2012 •
News You Can Use Digest – August 10, 2012
Here are highlights from the latest edition of News You Can Use:
National:
Jack Abramoff Urges Ethics Reform in NCSL Speech
Policing the Politicians; State Ethics Commissions Lack Muscle
Federal:
Is Your Neighbor a Democrat? A New App Can Tell You
From the States and Municipalities:
Alabama
Judge Sentences Siegelman to 78 Months in Prison in Corruption Case
Arkansas
Arkansas State Police Set Policy for Troopers Working College Sports Events
District of Columbia
Petition to Vote on Banning Corporate Political Donations Fails
Florida
Judge Voids Florida Limit on Minors’ Campaign Giving
Missouri
Missouri Lawmakers Keep Reeling in Gifts from Lobbyists
Nebraska
Supreme Court Overturns Campaign Finance Law
New York
Board Accused of Shielding Donors
Ohio
Ohioans to Vote on Drawing Political Maps
South Carolina
Ethics Reform Effort Faces Uphill Fight in S.C.
Virginia
A Facebook Court Battle: Is ‘liking’ something protected free speech?
Washington
Public Disclosure Commission Keeps Working to Inform Voters
West Virginia
Federal Judge Blocks W.Va. Cap on PAC Contributions Pending Legal Challenge
State and Federal Communications produces a weekly summary of national news, offering more than 80 articles per week focused on ethics, lobbying, and campaign finance.
News You Can Use is a news service provided at no charge only to clients of our online Executive Source Guides, or ALERTS™ consulting clients.
August 10, 2012 •
Jack Abramoff Gives Speech at NCSL
Presentation called an “eye opener”
On Thursday, former lobbyist Jack Abramoff spoke at the NCSL Legislative Summit in Chicago. While he maintained that 99 percent of his work in lobbying had been ethical, his speech championed the need for ethics and campaign finance reform.
For the full story, be sure to read “Jack Abramoff Urges Ethics Reform In NCSL Speech” by John Celock in the Huffington Post.
According to the article: “Abramoff, who served four years in federal prison for crimes related to the Indian gaming lobby, told the National Conference of State Legislatures that public officials need to be mindful of what lobbyists do, and take money and gifts out of politics. Abramoff has spent his time since prison advocating for ethics reform, along with writing a 2011 book on his crimes.”
August 9, 2012 •
Eye on the Races – August 9, 2012
Convention plans come together for both parties as each announce speakers for the events.
San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro was selected last week as the keynote speaker for the DNC convention. Castro is being touted as a rising star in the party and the DNC is looking to garner latino support with his selection. First Lady Michelle Obama will open the event on Tuesday, September 4, while her husband will close the event accepting the party’s nomination on Thursday. Former President Clinton has also been given a prominent role and will speak at the convention and likely place President Obama’s name formally into nomination. Other speakers include Former President Jimmy Carter and Massachusetts Senate Candidate Elizabeth Warren.
While the RNC has not yet named a keynote speaker, Chris Christie is widely believed to be chosen for the slot. Additionally, as more speakers are announced, Gov. Romney’s Vice Presidential list grows shorter. Already announced speakers include Condoleezza Rice, Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, Current Florida Gov. Rick Scott, Ohio Gov. John Kasich, Sen. Rick Santorum, South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley and New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez. Noticeably absent from the list are potential VP’s Bobby Jindal, Tim Pawlenty, Marco Rubio and Rob Portman. Both former presidents George H.W. Bush and George W. Bush declined invitations to the convention, as well as former Vice President Dick Cheney.
Other notes from the trail:
- Representative Todd Akin won the Missouri Republican Primary Tuesday and will face Senator Claire McCaskill in November. The race was tightly contested with Akin receiving 36% of the vote defeating businessman John Brunner and State Treasurer Sarah Steelman who received 30% and 29% respectively. Steelman was a favorite of the tea party and received a late endorsement from Sarah Palin. Democrats worked hard to elevate Akin, who they see as the weakest of the three candidates, by spending approximately $1.7 million on the race attacking both Brunner and Steelman.
- Ted Cruz won last Tuesday’s Texas republican primary to replace retiring Senator Kay Baily Hutchison (R). Cruz is a tea party backed candidate and defeated current Texas Lt. Governor David Dewhurst. Dewhurst had support from a number of established members of the GOP including Texas Governor Rick Perry while Cruz earned support from the likes of Sarah Palin, Rand Paul (R-KY), Glenn Beck and others. Cruz’s victory is seen as a major win for the tea party as a Republican is likely to succeed Hutchison in her senate seat.
- Polls show a very tight race for the Virginia Senate seat being vacated by Sen. Jim Webb. The race pits two former Virginia Governors, Tim Kaine (D) and George Allen (R) against each other for the seat formerly held by Allen. Rasmussen’s latest poll shows the race tied with each candidate receiving 46% support. Virginia is vital to the presidential election as well and both President Obama and Gov. Romney will campaign with Kaine and Allen in the coming weeks.
State and Federal Communications, Inc. provides research and consulting services for government relations professionals on lobbying laws, procurement lobbying laws, political contribution laws in the United States and Canada. Learn more by visiting stateandfed.com.