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H.B. 84

             1     

CAMPAIGN FINANCING AND GIFT

             2     
REGULATION

             3     
2009 GENERAL SESSION

             4     
STATE OF UTAH

             5     
Chief Sponsor: Steven R. Mascaro

             6     
Senate Sponsor: ____________

             7     
             8      LONG TITLE
             9      General Description:
             10          This bill modifies Campaign and Financial Reporting Requirements and the Lobbyist
             11      Disclosure and Regulations Act by amending reporting requirements and gift limits
             12      required for reporting food or beverages and making other changes.
             13      Highlighted Provisions:
             14          This bill:
             15          .    requires that the employer and occupation of a campaign contributor be included in
             16      campaign financial disclosure statements;
             17          .    defines personal use expenditure;
             18          .    prohibits state constitutional offices and offices in the Legislature or state or local
             19      school boards from spending campaign monies for a personal use expenditure;
             20          .    establishes requirements for the expenditure or transfer of monies remaining in
             21      campaign accounts created by candidates for state constitutional offices and offices
             22      in the Legislature or state or local school boards;
             23          .    requires that expenditures for food or beverage be reported by public official name
             24      if the expenditure exceeds $10, rather than the current $50 threshold and requires
             25      that a statement of the business purpose of the expenditure be included;
             26          .    requires the financial disclosure website established by the lieutenant governor to
             27      feature an easily searchable Internet database of the contents of campaign financial


             28      statements;
             29          .    requires that a public official who accepts food or beverage that is required to be
             30      disclosed by a lobbyist to also file a quarterly financial report for the food or
             31      beverage, with the lieutenant governor and include a statement of the business
             32      purpose of the expenditure;
             33          .    requires a lobbyist, principal, or government officer who gives certain food or
             34      beverage to provide notice to the public official of the estimated value of the food or
             35      beverage;
             36          .    repeals the provision that certain public official involvement in a government action
             37      is required to prohibit a lobbyist, principal, or government officer from giving a gift;
             38          .    reduces the occasional nonpecuniary gift threshold from $50 to $10 given from a
             39      lobbyist, principal, or government officer to a public official;
             40          .    provides certain penalties for a public official who fails to report certain food or
             41      beverage and for a lobbyist, principal, or government officer who fails to provide
             42      the value of the food or beverage to the public official; and
             43          .    makes technical changes.
             44      Monies Appropriated in this Bill:
             45          None
             46      Other Special Clauses:
             47          None
             48      Utah Code Sections Affected:
             49      AMENDS:
             50          20A-11-101, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2008, Chapters 14 and 49
             51          20A-11-103, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2008, Chapters 14 and 49
             52          20A-11-201, as last amended by Laws of Utah 1997, Chapter 355
             53          20A-11-301, as last amended by Laws of Utah 1997, Chapter 355
             54          20A-11-402, as last amended by Laws of Utah 1997, Chapter 355
             55          20A-11-1002, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2002, Chapter 317
             56          20A-11-1301, as enacted by Laws of Utah 1997, Chapter 355
             57          20A-12-301, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2001, Chapter 166
             58          36-11-103, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2008, Chapter 382


             59          36-11-201, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2007, Chapters 233 and 239
             60          36-11-304, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2007, Chapter 233
             61          36-11-401, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2000, Chapter 338
             62      ENACTS:
             63          36-11-203, Utah Code Annotated 1953
             64     
             65      Be it enacted by the Legislature of the state of Utah:
             66          Section 1. Section 20A-11-101 is amended to read:
             67           20A-11-101. Definitions.
             68          As used in this chapter:
             69          (1) "Address" means the number and street where an individual resides or where a
             70      reporting entity has its principal office.
             71          (2) "Ballot proposition" includes initiatives, referenda, proposed constitutional
             72      amendments, and any other ballot propositions submitted to the voters that are authorized by
             73      the Utah Code Annotated 1953.
             74          (3) "Candidate" means any person who:
             75          (a) files a declaration of candidacy for a public office; or
             76          (b) receives contributions, makes expenditures, or gives consent for any other person to
             77      receive contributions or make expenditures to bring about the person's nomination or election
             78      to a public office.
             79          (4) "Chief election officer" means:
             80          (a) the lieutenant governor for state office candidates, legislative office candidates,
             81      officeholders, political parties, political action committees, corporations, political issues
             82      committees, and state school board candidates; and
             83          (b) the county clerk for local school board candidates.
             84          (5) "Continuing political party" means an organization of voters that participated in the
             85      last regular general election and polled a total vote equal to 2% or more of the total votes cast
             86      for all candidates for the United States House of Representatives.
             87          (6) (a) "Contribution" means any of the following when done for political purposes:
             88          (i) a gift, subscription, donation, loan, advance, or deposit of money or anything of
             89      value given to the filing entity;


             90          (ii) an express, legally enforceable contract, promise, or agreement to make a gift,
             91      subscription, donation, unpaid or partially unpaid loan, advance, or deposit of money or
             92      anything of value to the filing entity;
             93          (iii) any transfer of funds from another reporting entity or a corporation to the filing
             94      entity;
             95          (iv) compensation paid by any person or reporting entity other than the filing entity for
             96      personal services provided without charge to the filing entity;
             97          (v) remuneration from any organization or its directly affiliated organization that has a
             98      registered lobbyist to compensate a legislator for a loss of salary or income while the
             99      Legislature is in session;
             100          (vi) salaries or other remuneration paid to a legislator by any agency or subdivision of
             101      the state, including school districts, for the period the Legislature is in session; and
             102          (vii) goods or services provided to or for the benefit of the filing entity at less than fair
             103      market value.
             104          (b) "Contribution" does not include:
             105          (i) services provided without compensation by individuals volunteering a portion or all
             106      of their time on behalf of the filing entity; or
             107          (ii) money lent to the filing entity by a financial institution in the ordinary course of
             108      business.
             109          (7) (a) "Corporation" means a domestic or foreign, profit or nonprofit, business
             110      organization that is registered as a corporation or is authorized to do business in a state and
             111      makes any expenditure from corporate funds for:
             112          (i) political purposes; or
             113          (ii) the purpose of influencing the approval or the defeat of any ballot proposition.
             114          (b) "Corporation" does not mean:
             115          (i) a business organization's political action committee or political issues committee; or
             116          (ii) a business entity organized as a partnership or a sole proprietorship.
             117          (8) "Detailed listing" means:
             118          (a) for each contribution or public service assistance:
             119          [(i) the name and address of the individual or source making the contribution or public
             120      service assistance;]


             121          (i) (A) from an individual, the individual's name, address, employer, and the
             122      occupation of the individual making the contribution or public service assistance; or
             123          (B) from an entity other than an individual, the entity's name and address or the name
             124      and addresses of the principals of the entity making the contribution or public service
             125      assistance;
             126          (ii) the amount or value of the contribution or public service assistance; and
             127          (iii) the date the contribution or public service assistance was made; and
             128          (b) for each expenditure:
             129          (i) the amount of the expenditure;
             130          (ii) the person or entity to whom it was disbursed;
             131          (iii) the specific purpose, item, or service acquired by the expenditure; and
             132          (iv) the date the expenditure was made.
             133          (9) "Election" means each:
             134          (a) regular general election;
             135          (b) regular primary election; and
             136          (c) special election at which candidates are eliminated and selected.
             137          (10) (a) "Expenditure" means:
             138          (i) any disbursement from contributions, receipts, or from the separate bank account
             139      required by this chapter;
             140          (ii) a purchase, payment, donation, distribution, loan, advance, deposit, gift of money,
             141      or anything of value made for political purposes;
             142          (iii) an express, legally enforceable contract, promise, or agreement to make any
             143      purchase, payment, donation, distribution, loan, advance, deposit, gift of money, or anything of
             144      value for political purposes;
             145          (iv) compensation paid by a corporation or filing entity for personal services rendered
             146      by a person without charge to a reporting entity;
             147          (v) a transfer of funds between the filing entity and a candidate's personal campaign
             148      committee; or
             149          (vi) goods or services provided by the filing entity to or for the benefit of another
             150      reporting entity for political purposes at less than fair market value.
             151          (b) "Expenditure" does not include:


             152          (i) services provided without compensation by individuals volunteering a portion or all
             153      of their time on behalf of a reporting entity;
             154          (ii) money lent to a reporting entity by a financial institution in the ordinary course of
             155      business; or
             156          (iii) anything listed in Subsection (10)(a) that is given by a corporation or reporting
             157      entity to candidates for office or officeholders in states other than Utah.
             158          (11) "Filing entity" means the reporting entity that is filing a financial statement
             159      required by this chapter.
             160          (12) "Financial statement" includes any summary report, interim report, verified
             161      financial statement, or other statement disclosing contributions, expenditures, receipts,
             162      donations, or disbursements that is required by this chapter.
             163          (13) "Governing board" means the individual or group of individuals that determine the
             164      candidates and committees that will receive expenditures from a political action committee.
             165          (14) "Incorporation" means the process established by Title 10, Chapter 2, Part 1,
             166      Incorporation, by which a geographical area becomes legally recognized as a city or town.
             167          (15) "Incorporation election" means the election authorized by Section 10-2-111 .
             168          (16) "Incorporation petition" means a petition authorized by Section 10-2-109 .
             169          (17) "Individual" means a natural person.
             170          (18) "Interim report" means a report identifying the contributions received and
             171      expenditures made since the last report.
             172          (19) "Legislative office" means the office of state senator, state representative, speaker
             173      of the House of Representatives, president of the Senate, and the leader, whip, and assistant
             174      whip of any party caucus in either house of the Legislature.
             175          (20) "Legislative office candidate" means a person who:
             176          (a) files a declaration of candidacy for the office of state senator or state representative;
             177          (b) declares himself to be a candidate for, or actively campaigns for, the position of
             178      speaker of the House of Representatives, president of the Senate, or the leader, whip, and
             179      assistant whip of any party caucus in either house of the Legislature; and
             180          (c) receives contributions, makes expenditures, or gives consent for any other person to
             181      receive contributions or make expenditures to bring about the person's nomination or election
             182      to a legislative office.


             183          (21) "Newly registered political party" means an organization of voters that has
             184      complied with the petition and organizing procedures of this chapter to become a registered
             185      political party.
             186          (22) "Officeholder" means a person who holds a public office.
             187          (23) "Party committee" means any committee organized by or authorized by the
             188      governing board of a registered political party.
             189          (24) "Person" means both natural and legal persons, including individuals, business
             190      organizations, personal campaign committees, party committees, political action committees,
             191      political issues committees, labor unions, and labor organizations.
             192          (25) "Personal campaign committee" means the committee appointed by a candidate to
             193      act for the candidate as provided in this chapter.
             194          (26) "Personal use expenditure" means an expenditure that provides a benefit of any
             195      kind to a candidate or officeholder that is not reasonably related to the candidate's election to
             196      the public office or to fulfilling duties of the public office.
             197          [(26)] (27) (a) "Political action committee" means an entity, or any group of
             198      individuals or entities within or outside this state, that solicits or receives contributions from
             199      any other person, group, or entity or makes expenditures:
             200          (i) for political purposes; or
             201          (ii) with the intent or in a way to influence or tend to influence, directly or indirectly,
             202      any person to refrain from voting or to vote for or against any candidate for a municipal or
             203      county office.
             204          (b) "Political action committee" includes groups affiliated with a registered political
             205      party but not authorized or organized by the governing board of the registered political party
             206      that receive contributions or makes expenditures for political purposes.
             207          (c) "Political action committee" does not mean:
             208          (i) a party committee;
             209          (ii) any entity that provides goods or services to a candidate or committee in the regular
             210      course of its business at the same price that would be provided to the general public;
             211          (iii) an individual;
             212          (iv) individuals who are related and who make contributions from a joint checking
             213      account;


             214          (v) a corporation; or
             215          (vi) a personal campaign committee.
             216          [(27)] (28) "Political convention" means a county or state political convention held by
             217      a registered political party to select candidates.
             218          [(28)] (29) (a) "Political issues committee" means an entity, or any group of individuals
             219      or entities within or outside this state, that solicits or receives donations from any other person,
             220      group, or entity or makes disbursements to influence, or to intend to influence, directly or
             221      indirectly, any person to:
             222          (i) assist in placing a ballot proposition on the ballot, assist in keeping a ballot
             223      proposition off the ballot, or refrain from voting or vote for or vote against any ballot
             224      proposition; or
             225          (ii) sign or refuse to sign an incorporation petition or refrain from voting, vote for, or
             226      vote against any proposed incorporation in an incorporation election.
             227          (b) "Political issues committee" does not mean:
             228          (i) a registered political party or a party committee;
             229          (ii) any entity that provides goods or services to an individual or committee in the
             230      regular course of its business at the same price that would be provided to the general public;
             231          (iii) an individual;
             232          (iv) individuals who are related and who make contributions from a joint checking
             233      account; or
             234          (v) a corporation, except a corporation whose apparent purpose is to act as a political
             235      issues committee.
             236          [(29)] (30) (a) "Political issues contribution" means any of the following:
             237          (i) a gift, subscription, unpaid or partially unpaid loan, advance, or deposit of money or
             238      anything of value given to a political issues committee;
             239          (ii) an express, legally enforceable contract, promise, or agreement to make a political
             240      issues donation to influence the approval or defeat of any ballot proposition;
             241          (iii) any transfer of funds received by a political issues committee from a reporting
             242      entity;
             243          (iv) compensation paid by another reporting entity for personal services rendered
             244      without charge to a political issues committee; and


             245          (v) goods or services provided to or for the benefit of a political issues committee at
             246      less than fair market value.
             247          (b) "Political issues contribution" does not include:
             248          (i) services provided without compensation by individuals volunteering a portion or all
             249      of their time on behalf of a political issues committee; or
             250          (ii) money lent to a political issues committee by a financial institution in the ordinary
             251      course of business.
             252          [(30)] (31) (a) "Political issues expenditure" means any of the following:
             253          (i) any payment from political issues contributions made for the purpose of influencing
             254      the approval or the defeat of:
             255          (A) a ballot proposition; or
             256          (B) an incorporation petition or incorporation election;
             257          (ii) a purchase, payment, distribution, loan, advance, deposit, or gift of money made for
             258      the purpose of influencing the approval or the defeat of:
             259          (A) a ballot proposition; or
             260          (B) an incorporation petition or incorporation election;
             261          (iii) an express, legally enforceable contract, promise, or agreement to make any
             262      political issues expenditure;
             263          (iv) compensation paid by a reporting entity for personal services rendered by a person
             264      without charge to a political issues committee; or
             265          (v) goods or services provided to or for the benefit of another reporting entity at less
             266      than fair market value.
             267          (b) "Political issues expenditure" does not include:
             268          (i) services provided without compensation by individuals volunteering a portion or all
             269      of their time on behalf of a political issues committee; or
             270          (ii) money lent to a political issues committee by a financial institution in the ordinary
             271      course of business.
             272          [(31)] (32) "Political purposes" means an act done with the intent or in a way to
             273      influence or tend to influence, directly or indirectly, any person to refrain from voting or to vote
             274      for or against any candidate for public office at any caucus, political convention, primary, or
             275      election.


             276          [(32)] (33) "Primary election" means any regular primary election held under the
             277      election laws.
             278          [(33)] (34) "Public office" means the office of governor, lieutenant governor, state
             279      auditor, state treasurer, attorney general, state or local school board member, state senator, state
             280      representative, speaker of the House of Representatives, president of the Senate, and the leader,
             281      whip, and assistant whip of any party caucus in either house of the Legislature.
             282          [(34)] (35) (a) "Public service assistance" means the following when given or provided
             283      to an officeholder to defray the costs of functioning in a public office or aid the officeholder to
             284      communicate with the officeholder's constituents:
             285          (i) a gift, subscription, donation, unpaid or partially unpaid loan, advance, or deposit of
             286      money or anything of value to an officeholder; or
             287          (ii) goods or services provided at less than fair market value to or for the benefit of the
             288      officeholder.
             289          (b) "Public service assistance" does not include:
             290          (i) anything provided by the state;
             291          (ii) services provided without compensation by individuals volunteering a portion or all
             292      of their time on behalf of an officeholder;
             293          (iii) money lent to an officeholder by a financial institution in the ordinary course of
             294      business;
             295          (iv) news coverage or any publication by the news media; or
             296          (v) any article, story, or other coverage as part of any regular publication of any
             297      organization unless substantially all the publication is devoted to information about the
             298      officeholder.
             299          [(35)] (36) "Publicly identified class of individuals" means a group of 50 or more
             300      individuals sharing a common occupation, interest, or association that contribute to a political
             301      action committee or political issues committee and whose names can be obtained by contacting
             302      the political action committee or political issues committee upon whose financial report they
             303      are listed.
             304          [(36)] (37) "Receipts" means contributions and public service assistance.
             305          [(37)] (38) "Registered lobbyist" means a person registered under Title 36, Chapter 11,
             306      Lobbyist Disclosure and Regulation Act.


             307          [(38)] (39) "Registered political action committee" means any political action
             308      committee that is required by this chapter to file a statement of organization with the lieutenant
             309      governor's office.
             310          [(39)] (40) "Registered political issues committee" means any political issues
             311      committee that is required by this chapter to file a statement of organization with the lieutenant
             312      governor's office.
             313          [(40)] (41) "Registered political party" means an organization of voters that:
             314          (a) participated in the last regular general election and polled a total vote equal to 2%
             315      or more of the total votes cast for all candidates for the United States House of Representatives
             316      for any of its candidates for any office; or
             317          (b) has complied with the petition and organizing procedures of this chapter.
             318          [(41)] (42) "Reporting entity" means a candidate, a candidate's personal campaign
             319      committee, an officeholder, a party committee, a political action committee, and a political
             320      issues committee.
             321          [(42)] (43) "School board office" means the office of state school board or local school
             322      board.
             323          [(43)] (44) (a) "Source" means the person or entity that is the legal owner of the
             324      tangible or intangible asset that comprises the contribution.
             325          (b) "Source" means, for political action committees and corporations, the political
             326      action committee and the corporation as entities, not the contributors to the political action
             327      committee or the owners or shareholders of the corporation.
             328          [(44)] (45) "State office" means the offices of governor, lieutenant governor, attorney
             329      general, state auditor, and state treasurer.
             330          [(45)] (46) "State office candidate" means a person who:
             331          (a) files a declaration of candidacy for a state office; or
             332          (b) receives contributions, makes expenditures, or gives consent for any other person to
             333      receive contributions or make expenditures to bring about the person's nomination or election
             334      to a state office.
             335          [(46)] (47) "Summary report" means the year end report containing the summary of a
             336      reporting entity's contributions and expenditures.
             337          [(47)] (48) "Supervisory board" means the individual or group of individuals that


             338      allocate expenditures from a political issues committee.
             339          Section 2. Section 20A-11-103 is amended to read:
             340           20A-11-103. Notice of pending interim and summary reports -- Form of
             341      submission -- Public availability -- Notice of local filings.
             342          (1) (a) Except as provided under Subsection (1)(b), ten days before a financial statement
             343      from a state office candidate, legislative office candidate, officeholder, state school board
             344      candidate, political party, political action committee, political issues committee, or judge is due
             345      under this chapter, the lieutenant governor shall inform those candidates, officeholders, parties,
             346      committees, and judges by postal mail or, if requested by the candidate, officeholder, party,
             347      committee, or judge, by electronic mail:
             348          (i) that the financial statement is due;
             349          (ii) the date that the financial statement is due;
             350          (iii) if the notification is sent to a judge in reference to the interim report due before the
             351      regular general election, or to a candidate in reference to an interim report due before the
             352      regular primary election, on August 31, or before the regular general election, that if the report
             353      is not timely filed, voters will be informed that the candidate or judge has been disqualified and
             354      any votes cast for the candidate or judge will not be counted;
             355          (iv) if the notification is sent to a political party, political action committee, or political
             356      issues committee in reference to an interim report or a verified financial statement, that the
             357      entity may be guilty of a class B misdemeanor for failing to file the report or statement; and
             358          (v) if the notification is in reference to a summary report, that the candidate,
             359      officeholder, party, committee, or judge may be guilty of a class B misdemeanor for failing to
             360      file the report.
             361          (b) Notwithstanding the provisions of Subsection (1)(a), under this section the
             362      lieutenant governor is not required to provide notice:
             363          (i) to a candidate of the financial statement that is due before the candidate's political
             364      convention; or
             365          (ii) of a financial statement due in connection with a public hearing for an initiative
             366      under the requirements of Section 20A-7-204.1 .
             367          (c) Ten days before an interim or summary report from a local school board candidate
             368      is due under this chapter, the county clerk shall inform the candidate by postal mail or, if


             369      requested, by electronic mail:
             370          (i) that the report is due;
             371          (ii) the date that the report is due;
             372          (iii) if the notification is in reference to an interim report due before the regular primary
             373      election, on August 31, or before the regular general election, that, if the report is not timely
             374      filed, voters will be informed that the candidate has been disqualified and any votes cast for the
             375      candidate will not be counted; and
             376          (iv) if the notification is in reference to a summary report, that the candidate may be
             377      guilty of a class B misdemeanor for failing to file the report.
             378          (2) Persons or entities submitting financial statements required by this chapter may
             379      submit them:
             380          (a) on paper, printed, typed, or legibly handwritten or hand printed;
             381          (b) on a computer disk according to specifications established by the chief election
             382      officer that protect against fraudulent filings and secure the accuracy of the information
             383      contained on the computer disk;
             384          (c) via fax; or
             385          (d) via electronic mail or the Internet, according to specifications established by the
             386      chief election officer.
             387          (3) A financial statement is considered timely filed if:
             388          (a) it is received in the chief election officer's office no later than 5:00 p.m. on the date
             389      that it is due;
             390          (b) it is received in the chief election officer's office with a postmark three days or
             391      more before the date that the financial statement was due; or
             392          (c) the candidate, judge, or entity has proof that the financial statement was mailed,
             393      with appropriate postage and addressing, three days before the financial statement was due.
             394          (4) (a) Notwithstanding any provision of Title 63G, Chapter 2, Government Records
             395      Access and Management Act, the lieutenant governor shall:
             396          [(a)] (i) make each campaign finance statement filed by a candidate available for public
             397      inspection and copying no later than one business day after the statement is filed; and
             398          [(b)] (ii) post an electronic copy or the contents of each campaign finance statement on
             399      a website established by the lieutenant governor:


             400          [(i)] (A) for campaign finance statements submitted to the lieutenant governor under
             401      the requirements of Section 10-3-208 or Section 17-16-6.5 , no later than seven business days
             402      after the date of receipt of the campaign finance statement; or
             403          [(ii)] (B) for a campaign finance statement filed under the requirements of this chapter,
             404      no later than seven business days after the date the statement is due.
             405          (b) The website established by the lieutenant governor under Subsection (4)(a) shall:
             406          (i) feature a searchable Internet database of the contents of campaign financial
             407      statements; and
             408          (ii) allow summary capabilities.
             409          (5) If a municipality, under Section 10-3-208 , or a county, under Section 17-16-6.5 ,
             410      elects to provide campaign finance disclosure on its own website, rather than through the
             411      lieutenant governor, the website established by the lieutenant governor shall contain a link or
             412      other access point to the municipality or county website.
             413          Section 3. Section 20A-11-201 is amended to read:
             414           20A-11-201. State office candidate -- Separate bank account for campaign funds.
             415          (1) (a) Each state office candidate or the candidate's personal campaign committee
             416      shall deposit each contribution and public service assistance received in one or more separate
             417      campaign accounts in a financial institution.
             418          (b) The state office candidate or the candidate's personal campaign committee:
             419          (i) may use the monies in those accounts only for political purposes[.]; and
             420          (ii) may not use the monies in those accounts for a personal use expenditure.
             421          (2) A state office candidate or the candidate's personal campaign committee may not
             422      deposit or mingle any contributions received into a personal or business account.
             423          (3) If a person [who] withdraws or is eliminated in a convention, primary, or regular
             424      general election, or is no longer a state office candidate [chooses not to expend the monies
             425      remaining in his campaign account], the person shall dispose of monies remaining in the
             426      person's campaign account by:
             427          (a) donating the monies to a registered political party or political action committee;
             428          (b) donating the monies to the state General Fund;
             429          (c) expending the monies for political purposes;
             430          (d) donating the monies to a tax-exempt, nonprofit entity;


             431          (e) repaying documented loans to the state office candidate's campaign;
             432          (f) donating the monies to another candidate's campaign account;
             433          (g) transferring the monies to another campaign account for the person to use as a
             434      candidate for:
             435          (i) a state or local elected office; or
             436          (ii) a federal elected office, as may be permitted or required by federal law; or
             437          (h) some combination of Subsections (3)(a) through (g).
             438          (4) A person who withdraws, is eliminated, or is no longer a state office candidate shall
             439      continue to file the year-end summary report required by Section 20A-11-203 until the
             440      statement of dissolution and final summary report required by Section 20A-11-205 are filed
             441      with the lieutenant governor.
             442          Section 4. Section 20A-11-301 is amended to read:
             443           20A-11-301. Legislative office candidate -- Campaign requirements.
             444          (1) Each legislative office candidate shall deposit each contribution and public service
             445      assistance received in one or more separate accounts in a financial institution that are dedicated
             446      only to that purpose.
             447          (2) A legislative office candidate may not:
             448          (a) make any expenditures for political purposes prohibited by law; and
             449          (b) use monies in an account required by this section:
             450          (i) for a personal use expenditure; or
             451          (ii) to donate to the campaign of another legislative candidate or legislative
             452      officeholder.
             453          [(2)] (3) A legislative office candidate may not deposit or mingle any contributions or
             454      public service assistance received into a personal or business account.
             455          [(3) A legislative office candidate may not make any political expenditures prohibited
             456      by law.]
             457          (4) If a person [who] withdraws or is eliminated in a convention, primary, or regular
             458      general election, or is no longer a legislative candidate [chooses not to expend the monies
             459      remaining in his campaign account], the person shall dispose of monies remaining in the
             460      person's campaign account by:
             461          (a) donating the monies to a registered political party or political action committee;


             462          (b) donating the monies to the state General Fund;
             463          (c) expending the monies for political purposes;
             464          (d) donating the monies to a tax-exempt, nonprofit entity;
             465          (e) repaying documented loans to the legislative office candidate's campaign;
             466          (f) donating the monies to another candidate's campaign account;
             467          (g) transferring the monies to another campaign account for the person to use as a
             468      candidate for:
             469          (i) a state or local elected office; or
             470          (ii) a federal elected office, as may be permitted or required by federal law; or
             471          (h) some combination of Subsections (4)(a) through (g).
             472          (5) A person who withdraws, is eliminated, or is no longer a legislative candidate shall
             473      continue to file the year-end summary report required by Section 20A-11-302 until the
             474      statement of dissolution and final summary report required by Section 20A-11-304 are filed
             475      with the lieutenant governor.
             476          Section 5. Section 20A-11-402 is amended to read:
             477           20A-11-402. Officeholder financial reporting requirements -- Termination of
             478      duty to report.
             479          (1) An officeholder is active and subject to reporting requirements until the
             480      officeholder has filed a statement of dissolution with the lieutenant governor stating that:
             481          (a) the officeholder is no longer receiving contributions or public service assistance and
             482      is no longer making expenditures;
             483          (b) the ending balance on the last summary report filed is zero and the balance in the
             484      separate bank account required by Sections 20A-11-201 and 20A-11-301 is zero; and
             485          (c) a final summary report in the form required by Section 20A-11-401 showing a zero
             486      balance is attached to the statement of dissolution.
             487          (2) A statement of dissolution and a final summary report may be filed at any time.
             488          (3) Each officeholder shall continue to file the year-end summary report required by
             489      Section 20A-11-401 until the statement of dissolution and final summary report required by
             490      this section are filed with the lieutenant governor.
             491          (4) When an officeholder leaves office, the person shall dispose of monies remaining
             492      in the person's campaign account required by Sections 20A-11-201 and 20A-11-301 by:


             493          (a) donating the monies to a registered political party or political action committee;
             494          (b) donating the monies to the state General Fund;
             495          (c) expending the monies for political purposes;
             496          (d) donating the monies to a tax-exempt, nonprofit entity;
             497          (e) repaying documented loans to the officeholder's campaign;
             498          (f) donating the monies to another candidate's campaign account;
             499          (g) transferring the monies to another campaign account for the person to use as a
             500      candidate for:
             501          (i) a state or local elected office; or
             502          (ii) a federal elected office, as may be permitted or required by federal law; or
             503          (h) some combination of Subsections (4)(a) through (g).
             504          Section 6. Section 20A-11-1002 is amended to read:
             505           20A-11-1002. Retention and public inspection of financial statements -- Written
             506      complaint if statement is false or unlawful.
             507          (1) The chief election officer shall:
             508          (a) make each financial statement required by this chapter:
             509          (i) open to public inspection in the office of the chief election officer; and
             510          (ii) available [for viewing on the Internet] on an easily searchable Internet database at
             511      the lieutenant governor's website within seven calendar days after the report is received by the
             512      chief election officer;
             513          (b) preserve [those statements] each statement for at least five years; and
             514          (c) provide a certified [copies of the] copy of a financial [statements] statement in the
             515      same manner as for other public records.
             516          (2) Any candidate or voter may file a written complaint with the chief election officer
             517      alleging that a filed financial statement does not conform to law or to the truth.
             518          Section 7. Section 20A-11-1301 is amended to read:
             519           20A-11-1301. School board office candidate -- Campaign requirements.
             520          (1) Each school board office candidate shall deposit each contribution and public
             521      service assistance received in one or more separate accounts in a financial institution that are
             522      dedicated only to that purpose.
             523          (2) A school board office candidate may not:


             524          (a) make any expenditures for political purposes prohibited by law; and
             525          (b) use monies in an account required by this section for a personal use expenditure.
             526          [(2)] (3) A school board office candidate may not deposit or mingle any contributions
             527      or public service assistance received into a personal or business account.
             528          [(3) A school board office candidate may not make any political expenditures
             529      prohibited by law.]
             530          (4) If a person [who] withdraws or is eliminated in a regular general election or is no
             531      longer a school board candidate [chooses not to expend the monies remaining in his campaign
             532      account], the person shall dispose of monies remaining in the person's campaign account by:
             533          (a) donating the monies to a registered political party or political action committee;
             534          (b) donating the monies to the state General Fund;
             535          (c) expending the monies for political purposes;
             536          (d) donating the monies to a tax-exempt, nonprofit entity;
             537          (e) repaying documented loans to the school board office candidate's campaign;
             538          (f) donating the monies to another candidate's campaign account;
             539          (g) transferring the monies to another campaign account for the person to use as a
             540      candidate for:
             541          (i) a state or local elected office; or
             542          (ii) a federal elected office, as may be permitted or required by federal law; or
             543          (h) some combination of Subsections (4)(a) through (g).
             544          (5) A person who withdraws, is eliminated, or is no longer a school board candidate
             545      shall continue to file the year-end summary report required by Section 20A-11-1302 until the
             546      statement of dissolution and final summary report required by Section 20A-11-1304 are filed
             547      with:
             548          (a) the lieutenant governor in the case of a state school board candidate; and
             549          (b) the county clerk, in the case of a local school board candidate.
             550          Section 8. Section 20A-12-301 is amended to read:
             551           20A-12-301. Definitions.
             552          As used in this part:
             553          (1) (a) "Contribution" means any of the following when done for political purposes:
             554          (i) a gift, subscription, donation, loan, advance, or deposit of money or anything of


             555      value given to the judge or the judge's personal campaign committee;
             556          (ii) an express, legally enforceable contract, promise, or agreement to make a gift,
             557      subscription, donation, unpaid or partially unpaid loan, advance, or deposit of money or
             558      anything of value to the judge or the judge's personal campaign committee;
             559          (iii) any transfer of funds from another reporting entity or a corporation to the judge or
             560      the judge's personal campaign committee;
             561          (iv) compensation paid by any person or reporting entity other than the judge or the
             562      judge's personal campaign committee for personal services provided without charge to the
             563      judge or the judge's personal campaign committee; and
             564          (v) goods or services provided to or for the benefit of the judge or the judge's personal
             565      campaign committee at less than fair market value.
             566          (b) "Contribution" does not include:
             567          (i) services provided without compensation by individuals volunteering a portion or all
             568      of their time on behalf of the judge or the judge's personal campaign committee; or
             569          (ii) money lent to the judge or the judge's personal campaign committee by a financial
             570      institution in the ordinary course of business.
             571          (2) (a) "Corporation" means a domestic or foreign, profit or nonprofit, business
             572      organization that is registered as a corporation or is authorized to do business in a state and
             573      makes any expenditure from corporate funds for political purposes.
             574          (b) "Corporation" does not mean:
             575          (i) a business organization's political action committee as defined in Section
             576      20A-11-101 or political issues committee as defined in Section 20A-11-101 ; or
             577          (ii) a business entity organized as a partnership or a sole proprietorship.
             578          (3) "Detailed listing" means:
             579          (a) for each contribution:
             580          (i) the name [and], address, employer, and occupation of the individual or the name,
             581      address, and organization of the source making the contribution;
             582          (ii) the amount or value of the contribution; and
             583          (iii) the date the contribution was made; and
             584          (b) for each expenditure:
             585          (i) the amount of the expenditure;


             586          (ii) the person or entity to whom it was disbursed;
             587          (iii) the specific purpose, item, or service acquired by the expenditure; and
             588          (iv) the date the expenditure was made.
             589          (4) (a) "Expenditure" means:
             590          (i) any disbursement from contributions or from the separate bank account required by
             591      this chapter;
             592          (ii) a purchase, payment, donation, distribution, loan, advance, deposit, gift of money,
             593      or anything of value made for political purposes;
             594          (iii) an express, legally enforceable contract, promise, or agreement to make any
             595      purchase, payment, donation, distribution, loan, advance, deposit, gift of money, or anything of
             596      value for political purposes;
             597          (iv) compensation paid by a corporation or reporting entity for personal services
             598      rendered by a person without charge to the judge or the judge's personal campaign committee;
             599          (v) a transfer of funds between the judge's personal campaign committee and another
             600      judge's personal campaign committee; or
             601          (vi) goods or services provided by the judge's personal campaign committee to or for
             602      the benefit of another judge for political purposes at less than fair market value.
             603          (b) "Expenditure" does not include:
             604          (i) services provided without compensation by individuals volunteering a portion or all
             605      of their time on behalf of the judge or judge's personal campaign committee; or
             606          (ii) money lent to a judge's personal campaign committee by a financial institution in
             607      the ordinary course of business.
             608          (5) "Individual" means a natural person.
             609          (6) "Interim report" means a report identifying the contributions received and
             610      expenditures made since the last report.
             611          (7) "Personal campaign committee" means the committee appointed by a judge to act
             612      for the judge as provided in this chapter.
             613          (8) "Political purposes" means an act done with the intent or in a way to influence or
             614      tend to influence, directly or indirectly, any person to refrain from voting or to vote for or
             615      against any judge standing for retention at any election.
             616          (9) "Reporting entity" means a judge, judge's personal campaign committee, candidate,


             617      a candidate's personal campaign committee, an officeholder, and a party committee, a political
             618      action committee, and a political issues committee.
             619          (10) "Summary report" means the year-end report containing the summary of a
             620      reporting entity's contributions and expenditures.
             621          Section 9. Section 36-11-103 is amended to read:
             622           36-11-103. Licensing requirements.
             623          (1) (a) Before engaging in any lobbying, a lobbyist shall obtain a license from the
             624      lieutenant governor by completing the form required by this section.
             625          (b) The lieutenant governor shall issue licenses to qualified lobbyists.
             626          (c) The lieutenant governor shall prepare a Lobbyist License Application Form that
             627      includes:
             628          (i) a place for the lobbyist's name and business address;
             629          (ii) a place for the name and business address of each principal for whom the lobbyist
             630      works or is hired as an independent contractor;
             631          (iii) a place for the name and address of the person who paid or will pay the lobbyist's
             632      registration fee, if the fee is not paid by the lobbyist;
             633          (iv) a place for the lobbyist to disclose any elected or appointed position that the
             634      lobbyist holds in state or local government, if any;
             635          (v) a place for the lobbyist to disclose the types of expenditures for which the lobbyist
             636      will be reimbursed; and
             637          (vi) a certification to be signed by the lobbyist that certifies that the information
             638      provided in the form is true, accurate, and complete to the best of the lobbyist's knowledge and
             639      belief.
             640          (2) Each lobbyist who obtains a license under this section shall update the licensure
             641      information when the lobbyist accepts employment for lobbying by a new client.
             642          (3) (a) Except as provided in Subsection (4), the lieutenant governor shall grant a
             643      lobbying license to an applicant who:
             644          (i) files an application with the lieutenant governor that contains the information
             645      required by this section; and
             646          (ii) pays a $25 filing fee.
             647          (b) A license entitles a person to serve as a lobbyist on behalf of one or more principals


             648      and expires on December 31 of each even-numbered year.
             649          (4) (a) The lieutenant governor may disapprove an application for a lobbying license:
             650          (i) if the applicant has been convicted of violating Section 76-8-103 , 76-8-107 ,
             651      76-8-108 , or 76-8-303 within five years before the date of the lobbying license application;
             652          (ii) if the applicant has been convicted of violating Section 76-8-104 or 76-8-304
             653      within one year before the date of the lobbying license application;
             654          (iii) for the term of any suspension imposed under Section 36-11-401 ; or
             655          (iv) if, within one year before the date of the lobbying license application, the applicant
             656      has been found to have willingly and knowingly:
             657          (A) violated [Section 36-11-103 ,] this section, Section 36-11-201 , 36-11-203 ,
             658      36-11-301 , 36-11-302 , 36-11-303 , 36-11-304 , 36-11-305 , or 36-11-403 ; or
             659          (B) filed a document required by this chapter that the lobbyist knew contained
             660      materially false information or omitted material information.
             661          (b) An applicant may appeal the disapproval in accordance with the procedures
             662      established by the lieutenant governor under this chapter and Title 63G, Chapter 4,
             663      Administrative Procedures Act.
             664          (5) The lieutenant governor shall deposit license fees in the General Fund.
             665          (6) A principal need not obtain a license under this section, but if the principal makes
             666      expenditures to benefit a public official without using a lobbyist as an agent to confer those
             667      benefits, the principal shall disclose those expenditures as required by [Sections] Section
             668      36-11-201 .
             669          (7) Government officers need not obtain a license under this section, but shall disclose
             670      any expenditures made to benefit public officials as required by [Sections] Section 36-11-201 .
             671          (8) Surrender, cancellation, or expiration of a lobbyist license does not absolve the
             672      lobbyist of the duty to file the financial reports if the lobbyist is otherwise required to file the
             673      reports by Section 36-11-201 .
             674          Section 10. Section 36-11-201 is amended to read:
             675           36-11-201. Lobbyist, principal, and government officer financial reporting
             676      requirements -- Prohibition for related person to make expenditures.
             677          (1) (a) (i) Each lobbyist shall file quarterly financial reports with the lieutenant
             678      governor on or before the due dates under Subsection (2)(a).


             679          (ii) If the lobbyist has not made an expenditure during the quarterly reporting period,
             680      the lobbyist shall file a quarterly financial report listing the amount of expenditures as "none."
             681          (b) Each government officer or principal that makes an expenditure during any of the
             682      quarterly reporting periods under Subsection (2)(a) shall file a quarterly financial report with
             683      the lieutenant governor on or before the date that a report for that quarter is due.
             684          (2) (a) Quarterly expense reports shall be due on the following dates:
             685          (i) April 10, for the period of January 1 through March 31;
             686          (ii) July 10, for the period of April 1 through June 30;
             687          (iii) October 10, for the period of July 1 through September 30; and
             688          (iv) January 10, for the period of October 1 through December 31 of the previous year.
             689          (b) If the due date for a financial report falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday,
             690      the report shall be considered to be due on the next succeeding business day.
             691          (c) A financial report shall be considered timely filed if it is:
             692          (i) postmarked on its due date; or
             693          (ii) filed electronically on or before the due date.
             694          (3) A quarterly financial report shall contain:
             695          (a) the total amount of expenditures made to benefit any public official during the
             696      quarterly reporting period;
             697          (b) the total amount of expenditures made, by public official type, during the quarterly
             698      reporting period;
             699          (c) for the report due on January 10:
             700          (i) the total amount of expenditures made to benefit any public official during the last
             701      calendar year; and
             702          (ii) the total amount of expenditures made, by public official type, during the last
             703      calendar year;
             704          (d) a disclosure of each expenditure made during the quarterly reporting period to
             705      reimburse or pay for the travel or lodging expenses of a public official, including for each trip:
             706          (i) the purpose and each destination of the trip;
             707          (ii) the name of each public official that participated in the trip;
             708          (iii) the public official type of each public official named;
             709          (iv) for each public official named, a listing of the amount and purpose of each


             710      expenditure made for travel or lodging that benefitted the public official; and
             711          (v) the total amount of expenditures made to benefit each public official named;
             712          (e) a disclosure of each expenditure made during the quarterly reporting period that
             713      was not disclosed under Subsection (3)(d), to be provided as follows:
             714          (i) using Schedule A under Section 36-11-201.3 , a disclosure of each of the following
             715      expenditures:
             716          (A) an expenditure made for the cost or value of admission to a professional or
             717      collegiate sporting event;
             718          [(B) an expenditure made for tangible personal property, if the aggregate daily
             719      expenditures benefitting the public official are greater than $10;]
             720          [(C)] (B) an expenditure made for food or beverage, if the aggregate daily expenditures
             721      benefitting the public official are greater than [$50] $10, which disclosure shall include a
             722      statement of the business purpose of the expenditure made for food or beverage; and
             723          [(D)] (C) any expenditure not otherwise reported in Subsection (3)(d), or this
             724      Subsection (3)(e)(i), if the aggregate daily expenditures benefitting the public official are
             725      greater than [$50] $10; and
             726          (ii) using Schedule B under Section 36-11-201.3 , a disclosure of every expenditure not
             727      reported in Subsection (3)(d) or (3)(e)(i);
             728          (f) for each public official who was employed by the lobbyist, principal, or government
             729      officer or who performed work as an independent contractor for the lobbyist, principal, or
             730      government officer during the last year, a list that provides:
             731          (i) the name of the public official; and
             732          (ii) the nature of the employment or contract with the public official;
             733          (g) each bill or resolution, by number and short title, on behalf of which the lobbyist,
             734      principal, or government officer made an expenditure to a public official for which a report is
             735      required by this section, if any;
             736          (h) a description of each executive action on behalf of which the lobbyist, principal, or
             737      government officer made an expenditure to a public official for which a report is required by
             738      this section, if any;
             739          (i) the general purposes, interests, and nature of the organization or organizations that
             740      the lobbyist, principal, or government officer filing the report represents; and


             741          (j) for a lobbyist, a certification that the information provided in the report is true,
             742      accurate, and complete to the lobbyist's best knowledge and belief.
             743          (4) In reporting expenditures under this section for events to which all legislators are
             744      invited, each lobbyist, principal, and government officer:
             745          (a) may not divide the cost of the event by the number of legislators who actually
             746      attend the event and report that cost as an expenditure made to those legislators;
             747          (b) shall divide the total cost by the total number of Utah legislators and others invited
             748      to the event and report that quotient as the amount expended for each legislator who actually
             749      attended the event; and
             750          (c) may not report any expenditure as made to a legislator who did not attend the event.
             751          (5) A related person may not, while assisting a lobbyist, principal, or government
             752      officer in lobbying, make an expenditure that benefits a public official under circumstances
             753      which would otherwise fall within the disclosure requirements of this chapter if the expenditure
             754      was made by the lobbyist, principal, or government officer.
             755          (6) The lieutenant governor shall:
             756          (a) (i) develop preprinted forms for all financial reports required by this section; and
             757          (ii) make copies of the forms available to each person who requests them; and
             758          (b) provide a reporting system that allows financial reports to be submitted via the
             759      Internet in accordance with the provisions of Subsection 20A-11-103 (4).
             760          (7) (a) Each lobbyist and each principal shall continue to file the quarterly financial
             761      reports required by this section until the lobbyist or principal files a statement with the
             762      lieutenant governor that:
             763          (i) states:
             764          (A) for a lobbyist, that the lobbyist has ceased lobbying activities; or
             765          (B) for a principal, that the principal no longer employs an individual as a lobbyist;
             766          (ii) in the case of a lobbyist, states that the lobbyist is surrendering the lobbyist's
             767      license;
             768          (iii) contains a listing, as required by this section, of all previously unreported
             769      expenditures that have been made through the date of the statement; and
             770          (iv) states that the lobbyist or principal will not make any additional expenditure that is
             771      not disclosed on the statement unless the lobbyist or principal complies with the disclosure and


             772      licensing requirements of this chapter.
             773          (b) A lobbyist that fails to renew the lobbyist's license or otherwise ceases to be
             774      licensed shall be required to file quarterly reports until the lobbyist files the statement required
             775      by Subsection (7)(a).
             776          Section 11. Section 36-11-203 is enacted to read:
             777          36-11-203. Public official financial reporting requirements.
             778          (1) (a) An expenditure for food or beverage that is required to be reported under
             779      Subsection 36-11-201 (3)(e)(i)(B) by a lobbyist, principal, or government officer shall also be
             780      reported as required under this section.
             781          (b) (i) Each public official who accepts food or beverage that is required to be
             782      disclosed under Subsection 36-11-201 (3)(e)(i)(B) during any of the quarterly reporting periods
             783      listed in Section 36-11-201 shall file a quarterly financial report with the lieutenant governor
             784      on or before the date that a report for that quarter is due.
             785          (ii) The report shall include a statement of the business purpose of the expenditure for
             786      food or beverage that was accepted.
             787          (2) (a) A lobbyist, principal, or government officer who gives food or beverage under
             788      Subsection (1), shall provide notice to the public official of the value of the food or beverage at
             789      the time that the food or beverage is given.
             790          (b) A public official may rely on the value provided under Subsection (2)(a) when
             791      filing a financial report required under this section.
             792          Section 12. Section 36-11-304 is amended to read:
             793           36-11-304. Prohibition on certain gifts of real or tangible personal property.
             794          (1) As used in this section:
             795          (a) "Gift" means a transfer of real property or tangible personal property for less than
             796      fair and adequate consideration.
             797          (b) "Gift" does not include a plaque, commendation, or award that is presented in
             798      public.
             799          (2) Except as provided in Subsection (3), a lobbyist, principal, or government officer
             800      may not offer to or give any public official any gift or loan [if the public official has been, or is
             801      now, or in the near future may be involved in any governmental action directly affecting the
             802      donor or lender].


             803          (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to the following:
             804          (a) an occasional nonpecuniary gift, having a value of not in excess of [$50] $10 per
             805      individual;
             806          (b) an award publicly presented in recognition of public services;
             807          (c) any bona fide loan made in the ordinary course of business; or
             808          (d) gifts to a relative.
             809          Section 13. Section 36-11-401 is amended to read:
             810           36-11-401. Penalties.
             811          (1) Any person who willfully and knowingly violates Section 36-11-103 , 36-11-201 ,
             812      36-11-203 , 36-11-301 , 36-11-302 , 36-11-303 , 36-11-304 , 36-11-305 , or 36-11-403 , is subject
             813      to the following penalties:
             814          (a) an administrative penalty of up to $1,000 for each violation; and
             815          (b) for each subsequent violation of that same section within 24 months, either:
             816          (i) an administrative penalty of up to $5,000; or
             817          (ii) suspension of the violator's lobbying license for up to one year, if the person is a
             818      lobbyist.
             819          (2) Any person who willfully and knowingly fails to file a financial report required by
             820      this chapter, omits material information from a license application form or financial report, or
             821      files false information on a license application form or financial report, is subject to the
             822      following penalties:
             823          (a) an administrative penalty of up to $1,000 for each violation; or
             824          (b) suspension of the violator's lobbying license for up to one year, if the person is a
             825      lobbyist.
             826          (3) Any person who willfully and knowingly fails to file a financial report required by
             827      this chapter on the date that it is due shall, in addition to the penalties, if any, imposed under
             828      Subsection (1) or (2), pay a penalty of up to $50 per day for each day that the report is late.
             829          (4) (a) When a lobbyist is convicted of violating Section 76-8-103 , 76-8-107 , 76-8-108 ,
             830      or 76-8-303 , the lieutenant governor shall suspend the lobbyist's license for up to five years
             831      from the date of the conviction.
             832          (b) When a lobbyist is convicted of violating Section 76-8-104 or 76-8-304 , the
             833      lieutenant governor shall suspend a lobbyist's license for up to one year from the date of


             834      conviction.
             835          (5) (a) Any person who willfully and knowingly violates Section 36-11-301 ,
             836      36-11-302 , or 36-11-303 is guilty of a class B misdemeanor.
             837          (b) The lieutenant governor shall suspend the lobbyist license of any person convicted
             838      under any of these sections for up to one year.
             839          (c) The suspension shall be in addition to any administrative penalties imposed by the
             840      lieutenant governor under this section.
             841          (d) Any person with evidence of a possible violation of this chapter may submit that
             842      evidence to the lieutenant governor for investigation and resolution.
             843          (6) Nothing in this chapter creates a third-party cause of action or appeal rights.




Legislative Review Note
    as of 12-18-08 6:53 AM


Office of Legislative Research and General Counsel


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