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Tuesday, March 19, 2024
March 19, 2024

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Panel votes on limiting free meals for lawmakers

Proposal aims to define 'infrequent occasions' for accepting food

The Columbian
Published:

State Rep. Brandon Vick, R-Vancouver, voted against a proposal on Tuesday that would limit the number of free meals lawmakers can accept from lobbyists to 12 a year.

Vick is a member of the Legislative Ethics Board, which voted 5-3 to clarify how often lawmakers can dine on a lobbyist’s dime. The vote was nonbinding, and the panel is expected to cast a binding vote in October.

State law prohibits lawmakers from accepting free meals on more than an “infrequent occasion,” but what that means has never been defined.

Vick said he’s in favor of creating a specific meal limitation, but he wanted to touch base with his fellow Republican lawmakers before casting a “yes” vote later this year.

State Rep. Brandon Vick, R-Vancouver, voted against a proposal on Tuesday that would limit the number of free meals lawmakers can accept from lobbyists to 12 a year.

Vick is a member of the Legislative Ethics Board, which voted 5-3 to clarify how often lawmakers can dine on a lobbyist's dime. The vote was nonbinding, and the panel is expected to cast a binding vote in October.

State law prohibits lawmakers from accepting free meals on more than an "infrequent occasion," but what that means has never been defined.

Vick said he's in favor of creating a specific meal limitation, but he wanted to touch base with his fellow Republican lawmakers before casting a "yes" vote later this year.

Vick said he understands the perception of lawmakers accepting meals from lobbyists can lead to distrust in the government, but said there has yet to be a proven correlation between taking meals and the way votes are cast.

"We shouldn't have legislators out living it up every night, but I want to get a feel where others are at," Vick said.

Vick said he understands the perception of lawmakers accepting meals from lobbyists can lead to distrust in the government, but said there has yet to be a proven correlation between taking meals and the way votes are cast.

“We shouldn’t have legislators out living it up every night, but I want to get a feel where others are at,” Vick said.

OLYMPIA — Lawmakers would be able to accept just 12 free meals from lobbyists each year under a plan from a legislative ethics panel.

The Legislative Ethics Board voted Tuesday 5-3 to define, for the first time, what current law means when it prohibits public officials from accepting free meals on more than “infrequent occasions.” The rule wouldn’t take effect until a final vote later this year on the overall proposal surrounding rules concerning meals.

Republican Sen. Jim Honeyford of Sunnyside, a member of the board, said he would like a higher number, saying that “I think two per month or less is infrequent.”

He then suggested 15 per year, but that motion failed, with only three votes in favor.

While a handful of the board members pushed for a limit of three meals a year, ultimately, the decision to settle on 12 was approved with the support of five members: Sen. Jamie Pederson, D-Seattle, Rep. Drew Hansen, D-Bainbridge Island, and citizen members Eugene Green of Lakewood, board chairwoman Kristine Hoover of Spokane, and vice chairman Kenny Pittman of Lacey.

“It does not mean you can’t have meal 13, 14, 15, 16, etc., with a lobbyist, it’s just that the lobbyist can’t pay for it,” Pittman said. “This does not limit access by lobbyists to legislators, it’s just that after 12 you have to pay for your own meal.”

Voting no were Honeyford, Rep. Brandon Vick, R-Felida, and former Republican Sen. Steven Johnson.

“The problem is that there’s a feeling that if you go to lunch at all, all of your activity here is being corrupted,” Johnson said. “I guess it could be just as corrupted in three meals or 20 meals. So what are we getting at?”

Hansen, calling in to the meeting by phone, noted that lawmakers have plenty of options that “do not involve a lobbyist buying you a lunch or dinner.”

“You can buy your own burrito with a lobbyist,” he said.

Lawmakers already have a daily stipend — known as a per diem — of $120 a day during the legislative session.

The board also voted Tuesday to define a meal as a sit-down meal — such as breakfast or lunch — regardless of the cost or value, and even if the meal is at a private residence.

Receptions hosted by lobbyists would not count as a meal.

The proposed changes come after The Associated Press and a consortium of public radio stations found that the state’s 50 most active lobbyists spent $65,000 in meals for lawmakers in the first four months of 2013. Last year, the board dismissed a complaint filed about the practice, noting that that the “infrequent occasion” rule is not clearly defined in the Ethics in Public Service Act.

The ethics board is set to meet again in October, where they are expected to discuss public disclosure requirements surrounding meals, and when they could potentially vote to approve the overall changes.

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