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Bill would impose fee on lobbyists, others

YAKIMA — A bill proposed in the Washington Legislature would require some elected officials, lobbyists and entities that hire lobbyists to pay a fee to help pay for and improve operations of the Public Disclosure Commission.

Published: Dec. 18, 2012 at 12:05 a.m. PST
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YAKIMA — A bill proposed in the Washington Legislature would require some elected officials, lobbyists and entities that hire lobbyists to pay a fee to help pay for and improve operations of the Public Disclosure Commission.

The bill’s sponsors, nine Democrats, say it is intended to unify processes, cut costs and increase public disclosure.

Similar bills have been proposed in the past and failed. Voters created the commission by initiative to ensure the state’s campaign finance laws are enforced and to provide the public access to information about financing of political campaigns and lobbying activities. For fiscal year 2012, the commission budget just tops $2 million.

House Bill 1005 would require political committees to pay a $200 annual fee to the commission. Lobbyists who earn $10,000 or more a year, companies paying more than $10,000 a year to lobby lawmakers, and elected officials whose salaries exceed $10,000 a year also would be required to pay the fee.

The bill would require government entities that employ more than 50 full-time employees to pay $150 annually. All money from the fees would go into a new account to be used only for improving computer and database technology to make campaign finance and lobbying reports more readily available to the public, under the bill.

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