
Senate Bill No. 699
(By Senator Burnette and Hunter)
____________


[Introduced February 18, 2002; referred to the Committee
on the Judiciary

.]










____________
A BILL to amend and reenact section five, article two, chapter
six-b of the code of West Virginia, one thousand nine hundred
thirty-one, as amended; to amend and reenact sections four and
seven, article three of said chapter; and to further amend
said article by adding thereto a new section, designated
section four-a, all relating to ethical standards for elected
and appointed officials and public employees;
including
political contributions from lobbyists as being prohibited
items for public officials to accept; providing that certain
items may be accepted by public officials without
solicitation; providing that lobbyists are not required to
report unreimbursed expenses incurred during travel; requiring
employers of lobbyists to fulfill certain reporting
requirements; and providing that lobbyists or their employers
may have one reception costing not more than five thousand dollars for the Legislature and public.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:
That section five, article two, chapter six-b of the code of
West Virginia, one thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as amended, be
amended and reenacted; that sections four and seven, article three
of said chapter be amended and reenacted; and that said article be
further amended by adding thereto a new section, designated section
four-a, all to read as follows:
ARTICLE 2. WEST VIRGINIA ETHICS COMMISSION; POWERS AND DUTIES;
DISCLOSURE OF FINANCIAL INTEREST BY PUBLIC OFFICIALS
AND EMPLOYEES; APPEARANCES BEFORE PUBLIC AGENCIES.
§6B-2-5. Ethical standards for elected and appointed officials and







public employees
.

(a) Persons subject to section. -- The provisions of this
section apply to all elected and appointed public officials and
public employees, whether full or part time, in state, county,
municipal governments and their respective boards, agencies,
departments and commissions and in any other regional or local
governmental agency, including county school boards.

(b) Use of public office for private gain. -- (1) A public
official or public employee may not knowingly and intentionally use
his or her office or the prestige of his or her office for his or
her own private gain or that of another person. The performance of
usual and customary duties associated with the office or position or the advancement of public policy goals or constituent services,
without compensation, does not constitute the use of prestige of
office for private gain.

(2) The Legislature, in enacting this subsection (b), relating
to the use of public office or public employment for private gain,
recognizes that there may be certain public officials or public
employees who bring to their respective offices or employment their
own unique personal prestige which is based upon their
intelligence, education, experience, skills and abilities, or other
personal gifts or traits. In many cases, these persons bring a
personal prestige to their office or employment which inures to the
benefit of the state and its citizens. Such persons may, in fact,
be sought by the state to serve in their office or employment
because, through their unusual gifts or traits, they bring stature
and recognition to their office or employment and to the state
itself. While the office or employment held or to be held by such
persons may have its own inherent prestige, it would be unfair to
such individuals and against the best interests of the citizens of
this state to deny such persons the right to hold public office or
be publicly employed on the grounds that they would, in addition to
the emoluments of their office or employment, be in a position to
benefit financially from the personal prestige which otherwise
inheres to them. Accordingly, the commission is directed, by
legislative rule, to establish categories of such public officials and public employees, identifying them generally by the office or
employment held, and offering persons who fit within such
categories the opportunity to apply for an exemption from the
application of the provisions of this subsection. Such exemptions
may be granted by the commission, on a case-by-case basis, when it
is shown that: (A) The public office held or the public employment
engaged in is not such that it would ordinarily be available or
offered to a substantial number of the citizens of this state; (B)
the office held or the employment engaged in is such that it
normally or specifically requires a person who possesses personal
prestige; and (C) the person's employment contract or letter of
appointment provides or anticipates that the person will gain
financially from activities which are not a part of his or her
office or employment.

(c) Gifts. -- (1) A public official or public employee may not
solicit any gift unless the solicitation is for a charitable
purpose with no resulting direct pecuniary benefit conferred upon
the official or employee or his or her immediate family: Provided,
That no public official or public employee may solicit for a
charitable purpose any gift from any person who is also an official
or employee of the state and whose position as such is subordinate
to the soliciting official or employee: Provided, however, That
nothing herein shall prohibit a candidate for public office from
soliciting a lawful political contribution. No official or employee may knowingly accept any gift, directly or indirectly,
including political contributions from a lobbyist or from any
person whom the official or employee knows or has reason to know:

(A) Is doing or seeking to do business of any kind with his or
her agency;

(B) Is engaged in activities which are regulated or controlled
by his or her agency; or

(C) Has financial interests which may be substantially and
materially affected, in a manner distinguishable from the public
generally, by the performance or nonperformance of his official
duties.

(2) Notwithstanding the provisions of subdivision (1) of this
subsection, a person who is a public official or public employee
may accept a gift described in this subdivision but not solicit
the following items, and there shall be a presumption that the
receipt of any such gift item does not impair the impartiality and
independent judgment of the person. This presumption may be
rebutted only by direct objective evidence that the gift did impair
the impartiality and independent judgment of the person or that the
person knew or had reason to know that the gift was offered with
the intent to impair his or her impartiality and independent
judgment. The provisions of subdivision (1) of this subsection do
not apply to items include:


(A) Meals and beverages;


(B) (A) Ceremonial gifts or awards which have insignificant
monetary value;


(C) (B) Unsolicited Gifts of nominal value or trivial items of
informational value;


(D) (C) Reasonable expenses for food, travel and lodging of
the official or employee for a meeting at which the official or
employee participates in a panel or speaking engagement at the
meeting;


(E) (D) Gifts of tickets or free admission extended to a
public official or public employee to attend charitable, cultural
or political events, if the purpose of such gift or admission is a
courtesy or ceremony customarily extended to the office;


(F) Gifts that are purely private and personal in nature; or


(G) (E) Gifts from relatives by blood or marriage, or a member
of the same household; and

(F) Meals and beverages provided at a reception that is open
to all members of the Legislature and the general public. Such a
reception can be held only once each year and the total cost cannot
exceed five thousand dollars.


(3) The commission shall, through legislative rule,
promulgated pursuant to chapter twenty-nine-a of this code,
establish guidelines for the acceptance of a reasonable honorarium
by public officials and elected officials. The rule promulgated
shall be consistent with this section. Any elected public official may accept an honorarium only when: (1) That official is a
part-time elected public official; (2) the fee is not related to
the official's public position or duties; (3) the fee is for
services provided by the public official that are related to the
public official's regular, nonpublic trade, profession, occupation,
hobby or avocation; and (4) the honorarium is not provided in
exchange for any promise or action on the part of the public
official.


(4) (3) Nothing in this section shall be construed so as to
prohibit the giving of a lawful political contribution as defined
by law.


(5) (4) The governor or his designee may, in the name of the
state of West Virginia, accept and receive gifts from any public or
private source. Any such gift so obtained shall become the
property of the state and shall, within thirty days of the receipt
thereof, be registered with the commission and the division of
culture and history.

(d) Interests in public contracts. -- (1) In addition to the
provisions of section fifteen, article ten, chapter sixty-one of
this code, no elected or appointed public official or public
employee or member of his or her immediate family or business with
which he or she is associated may be a party to or have an interest
in the profits or benefits of a contract which such official or
employee may have direct authority to enter into, or over which he or she may have control: Provided, That nothing herein shall be
construed to prevent or make unlawful the employment of any person
with any governmental body: Provided, however, That nothing herein
shall be construed to prohibit a member of the Legislature from
entering into a contract with any governmental body, or prohibit a
part-time appointed public official from entering into a contract
which such part-time appointed public official may have direct
authority to enter into or over which he or she may have control
when such official has been recused from deciding or evaluating and
excused from voting on such contract and has fully disclosed the
extent of such interest in the contract.

(2) In the absence of bribery or a purpose to defraud, an
elected or appointed public official or public employee or a member
of his or her immediate family or a business with which he or she
is associated shall not be considered as having an interest in a
public contract when such a person has a limited interest as an
owner, shareholder or creditor of the business which is the
contractor on the public contract involved. A limited interest for
the purposes of this subsection is:

(A) An interest:

(i) Not exceeding ten percent of the partnership or the
outstanding shares of a corporation; or

(ii) Not exceeding thirty thousand dollars interest in the
profits or benefits of the contract; or

(B) An interest as a creditor:

(i) Not exceeding ten percent of the total indebtedness of a
business; or

(ii) Not exceeding thirty thousand dollars interest in the
profits or benefits of the contract.

(3) Where the provisions of subdivisions (1) and (2) of this
subsection would result in the loss of a quorum in a public body or
agency, in excessive cost, undue hardship, or other substantial
interference with the operation of a state, county, municipality,
county school board or other governmental agency, the affected
governmental body or agency may make written application to the
ethics commission for an exemption from subdivisions (1) and (2) of
this subsection.

(e) Confidential information. -- No present or former public
official or employee may knowingly and improperly disclose any
confidential information acquired by him or her in the course of
his or her official duties nor use such information to further his
or her personal interests or the interests of another person.

(f) Prohibited representation. -- No present or former elected
or appointed public official or public employee shall, during or
after his or her public employment or service, represent a client
or act in a representative capacity with or without compensation on
behalf of any person in a contested case, rate-making proceeding,
license or permit application, regulation filing or other particular matter involving a specific party or parties which arose
during his or her period of public service or employment and in
which he or she personally and substantially participated in a
decision-making, advisory or staff support capacity, unless the
appropriate government agency, after consultation, consents to such
representation. A staff attorney, accountant or other professional
employee who has represented a government agency in a particular
matter shall not thereafter represent another client in the same or
substantially related matter in which that client's interests are
materially adverse to the interests of the government agency,
without the consent of the government agency: Provided, That this
prohibition on representation shall not apply when the client was
not directly involved in the particular matter in which such
professional employee represented the government agency, but was
involved only as a member of a class. The provisions of this
subsection shall not apply to legislators who were in office and
legislative staff who were employed at the time it originally
became effective on the first day of July, one thousand nine
hundred eighty-nine, and those who have since become legislators or
legislative staff and those who shall serve hereafter as
legislators or legislative staff.

(g) Limitation on practice before a board, agency, commission
or department. -- (1) No elected or appointed public official and
no full-time staff attorney or accountant shall, during his or her public service or public employment or for a period of six months
after the termination of his or her public service or public
employment with a governmental entity authorized to hear contested
cases or promulgate regulations, appear in a representative
capacity before the governmental entity in which he or she serves
or served or is or was employed in the following matters:

(A) A contested case involving an administrative sanction,
action or refusal to act;

(B) To support or oppose a proposed regulation;

(C) To support or contest the issuance or denial of a license
or permit;

(D) A rate-making proceeding; and

(E) To influence the expenditure of public funds.

(2) As used in this subsection, "represent" includes any
formal or informal appearance before, or any written or oral
communication with, any public agency on behalf of any person:
Provided, That nothing contained in this subsection shall prohibit,
during any period, a former public official or employee from being
retained by or employed to represent, assist, or act in a
representative capacity on behalf of the public agency by which he
or she was employed or in which he or she served. Nothing in this
subsection shall be construed to prevent a former public official
or employee from representing another state, county, municipal or
other governmental entity before the governmental entity in which he or she served or was employed within six months after the
termination of his or her employment or service in the entity.

(3) A present or former public official or employee may appear
at any time in a representative capacity before the Legislature, a
county commission, city or town council or county school board in
relation to the consideration of a statute, budget, ordinance,
rule, resolution or enactment.

(4) Members and former members of the Legislature and
professional employees and former professional employees of the
Legislature shall be permitted to appear in a representative
capacity on behalf of clients before any governmental agency of the
state, or of county or municipal governments including county
school boards.

(5) An elected or appointed public official, full-time staff
attorney or accountant who would be adversely affected by the
provisions of this subsection may apply to the ethics commission
for an exemption from the six months prohibition against appearing
in a representative capacity, when the person's education and
experience is such that the prohibition would, for all practical
purposes, deprive the person of the ability to earn a livelihood in
this state outside of the governmental agency. The ethics
commission shall by legislative rule establish general guidelines
or standards for granting an exemption or reducing the time period,
but shall decide each application on a case-by-case basis.

(h) Employment by regulated persons. -- (1) No full-time
official or full-time public employee may seek employment with, be
employed by, or seek to sell or lease real or personal property to
any person who:

(A) Had a matter on which he or she took, or a subordinate is
known to have taken, regulatory action within the preceding twelve
months; or

(B) Has a matter before the agency to which he or she is
working or a subordinate is known by him or her to be working.

(2) Within the meaning of this section, the term "employment"
includes professional services and other services rendered by the
public official or public employee, whether rendered as employee or
as an independent contractor; "seek employment" includes responding
to unsolicited offers of employment as well as any direct or
indirect contact with a potential employer relating to the
availability or conditions of employment in furtherance of
obtaining employment; and "subordinate" includes only those agency
personnel over whom the public servant has supervisory
responsibility.

(3) A full-time public official or full-time public employee
who would be adversely affected by the provisions of this
subsection may apply to the ethics commission for an exemption from
the prohibition contained in subsection (1). The ethics commission
shall by legislative rule establish general guidelines or standards for granting an exemption, but shall decide each application on a
case-by-case basis.

(4) A full-time public official or full-time public employee
may not take personal regulatory action on a matter affecting a
person by whom he or she is employed or with whom he or she is
seeking employment or has an agreement concerning future
employment.

(5) A full-time public official or full-time public employee
may not receive private compensation for providing information or
services that he or she is required to provide in carrying out his
or her public job responsibilities.

(i) Members of the Legislature required to vote. -- Members of
the Legislature who have asked to be excused from voting or who
have made inquiry as to whether they should be excused from voting
on a particular matter and who are required by the presiding
officer of the House of Delegates or Senate of West Virginia to
vote under the rules of the particular house shall not be guilty of
any violation of ethics under the provisions of this section for a
vote so cast.

(j) Limitations on participation in licensing and rate-making
proceedings. -- No public official or employee may participate
within the scope of his or her duties as a public official or
employee, except through ministerial functions as defined in
section three, article one of this chapter, in any license or rate-making proceeding that directly affects the license or rates
of any person, partnership, trust, business trust, corporation or
association in which the public official or employee or his or her
immediate family owns or controls more than ten percent. No public
official or public employee may participate within the scope of his
or her duties as a public official or public employee, except
through ministerial functions as defined in section three, article
one of this chapter, in any license or rate-making proceeding that
directly affects the license or rates of any person to whom the
public official or public employee or his or her immediate family,
or a partnership, trust, business trust, corporation or association
of which the public official or employee, or his or her immediate
family, owns or controls more than ten percent, has sold goods or
services totaling more than one thousand dollars during the
preceding year, unless the public official or public employee has
filed a written statement acknowledging such sale with the public
agency and the statement is entered in any public record of the
agency's proceedings. This subsection shall not be construed to
require the disclosure of clients of attorneys or of patients or
clients of persons licensed pursuant to articles three, eight,
fourteen, fourteen-a, fifteen, sixteen, twenty, twenty-one or
thirty-one, chapter thirty of this code.

(k) Certain expenses prohibited. -- No public official or
public employee shall knowingly request or accept from any governmental entity compensation or reimbursement for any expenses
actually paid by a lobbyist and required by the provisions of this
chapter to be reported, or actually paid by any other person.

(l) Any person who is employed as a member of the faculty or
staff of a public institution of higher education and who is
engaged in teaching, research, consulting or publication activities
in his or her field of expertise with public or private entities
and thereby derives private benefits from such activities shall be
exempt from the prohibitions contained in subsections (b), (c) and
(d) of this section when the activity is approved as a part of an
employment contract with the governing board of such institution or
has been approved by the employees' department supervisor or the
president of the institution by which the faculty or staff member
is employed.

(m) Except as provided in this section, a person who is a
public official or public employee may not solicit private business
from a subordinate public official or public employee whom he or
she has the authority to direct, supervise or control. A person
who is a public official or public employee may solicit private
business from a subordinate public official or public employee whom
he or she has the authority to direct, supervise or control when:

(A) The solicitation is a general solicitation directed to the
public at large through the mailing or other means of distribution
of a letter, pamphlet, handbill, circular or other written or printed media; or

(B) The solicitation is limited to the posting of a notice in
a communal work area; or

(C) The solicitation is for the sale of property of a kind
that the person is not regularly engaged in selling; or

(D) The solicitation is made at the location of a private
business owned or operated by the person to which the subordinate
public official or public employee has come on his or her own
initiative.

(n) The commission by legislative rule promulgated in
accordance with chapter twenty-nine-a of this code may define
further exemptions from this section as necessary or appropriate.
ARTICLE 3. LOBBYISTS.
§6B-3-4. Reporting by lobbyists.

(a) A lobbyist shall file with the commission reports of his
lobbying activities, signed under oath or affirmation by the
lobbyist. Lobbyists who are required under this article to file
copies of their registration statements with the clerks of the
respective houses of the Legislature shall also contemporaneously
file copies of all reports required under this section with the
clerks. Such reports shall be filed as follows:

(1) On or before the Monday preceding the second Wednesday in
January of each year, a lobbyist shall file an annual report of all
lobbying activities which he or she engaged in during the preceding calendar year; and

(2) If a lobbyist engages in lobbying with respect to
legislation, then:

(A) Between the fortieth and forty-fifth days of any regular
session of the Legislature in which any such lobbying occurred, the
lobbyist shall file a report describing all of his or her lobbying
activities which occurred since the beginning of the calendar year;
and

(B) Within twenty-one days after the adjournment sine die of
any regular or extraordinary session of the Legislature in which
any such lobbying occurred, the lobbyist shall file a report
describing all of his or her lobbying activities which occurred
since the beginning of the calendar year or since the filing of the
last report required by this section, whichever is later.

(b)(1) Except as otherwise provided in this section, each
report filed by a lobbyist shall show the lobbyist's compensation
and the total amount of all expenditures for lobbying made or
incurred by such lobbyist, or on behalf of such lobbyist by the
lobbyist's employer, during the period covered by the report. The
report shall also show subtotals segregated according to financial
category, including meals and beverages; living accommodations;
advertising; travel; contributions; gifts to public officials or
employees or to members of the immediate family of such persons;
and other expenses or services.

(2) Lobbyists are not required to report the following:

(A) Unreimbursed personal living and travel expenses not
incurred directly for lobbying;

(B) Any expenses incurred for his or her own living
accommodations; and

(C) Any unreimbursed expenses incurred for his or her own
travel to and from public meetings or hearings of the legislative
and executive branches.


(D) Any expenses incurred for telephone, and any office
expenses, including rent and salaries and wages paid for staff and
secretarial assistance; and


(E) Separate expenditures to or on behalf of a public official
or employee in an amount of less than five dollars.

(c) If a lobbyist is employed by more than one employer, the
report shall show the proportionate amount of such expenditures in
each category incurred on behalf of each of his employers.

(d) The report shall describe the subject matter of the
lobbying activities in which the lobbyist has been engaged during
the reporting period.


(e) If, during the period covered by the report, the lobbyist
made expenditures in the reporting categories of meals and
beverages, living accommodations, travel, gifts or other
expenditures, other than for those expenditures governed by
subsection (f) of this section, which expenditures in any such reporting category total more than twenty-five dollars to or on
behalf of any particular public official or employee, the lobbyist
shall report the name of the public official or employee to whom or
on whose behalf the expenditures were made, the total amount of the
expenditures, and the subject matter of the lobbying activity, if
any. Under this subsection (e), no portion of the amount of an
expenditure for a dinner, party or other function sponsored by a
lobbyist or a lobbyist's employer need be attributed to or counted
toward the reporting amount of twenty-five dollars for a particular
public official or employee who attends such function if the
sponsor has invited to the function all the members of: (1) The
Legislature; (2) either house of the Legislature; (3) a standing or
select committee of either house; or (4) a joint committee of the
two houses of the Legislature. However, the amount spent for such
function shall be added to other expenditures for the purpose of
determining the total amount of expenditures reported under
subsection (b) of this section.


(f) (e) If, during the period covered by the report, the
lobbyist made expenditures in the reporting categories of meals and
beverages, lodging, travel, gifts and scheduled entertainment,
which reporting expenditures in any such reporting category total
more than twenty-five dollars for or on behalf of a particular
public official or public employee in return for the participation
of the public official or employee in a panel or speaking engagement at the meeting, the lobbyist shall report the name of
the public official or employee to whom or on whose behalf the
expenditures were made and the total amount of the expenditures.
§6B-3-4a. Reporting of employers of lobbyists.

(a) Anyone who employs a lobbyist, whether a corporation,
labor union, professional group or association, or any other type
of association, must report its general financial condition with
the commission. This includes all financial statements for the
fiscal year immediately preceding the year in which the lobbyist
is employed. These statements must include, at a minimum,
information concerning the employer's annual income, expenses,
assets and liabilities.

(b) This information must be provided before or
contemporaneously with the registration of the lobbyist. If the
information for the preceding fiscal year is unavailable at the
time of the registration of the lobbyist, the employer can provide
the information for the fiscal year immediately preceding the year
that immediately precedes the year of registration of the lobbyist,
but the additional financial information must be filed immediately
upon receipt of it.
§6B-3-7. Duties of lobbyists.

A person required to register as a lobbyist under this chapter
shall also have the following obligations, the violation of which
shall constitute cause for revocation of his registration, and may subject such person, and such person's employer, if such employer
aids, abets, ratifies, or confirms any such act, to other civil
liabilities, as provided by this chapter.

(1) Such persons shall obtain and preserve all accounts,
bills, receipts, books, papers and documents necessary to
substantiate the financial reports required to be made under this
article for a period of at least five years from the date of the
filing of the statement containing such items, which accounts,
bills, receipts, books, papers, and documents shall be made
available for inspection by the commission at any time: Provided,
That if a lobbyist is required under the terms of his or her
employment contract to turn any records over to his or her
employer, responsibility for the preservation of such records under
this subsection shall rest with such employer.

(2) In addition, a person required to register as a lobbyist
shall not:

(A) Engage in any activity as a lobbyist before registering as
such;

(B) Knowingly deceive or attempt to deceive any government
officer or employee as to any fact pertaining to a matter which is
the subject of lobbying activity;

(C) Cause or influence the introduction of any legislation for
the purpose of thereafter being employed to secure its defeat;

(D) Exercise any undue influence, threats, extortion, or unlawful retaliation upon any government officer or employee by
reason of such government officer or employee's position with
respect to, or his vote upon, any matter which is the subject of
lobbying activity;
(E) Exercise undue influence upon any legislator or other
privately employed government officer or employee through
communications with such person's employer;

(F) Give a gift to any government officer or employee in
excess of or in violation of any limitations on gifts set forth in
subsection (c), section five, article two of this chapter, or give
any gift, whether lawful or unlawful, to a government officer or
employee without such government officer or employee's knowledge
and consent.





NOTE: The purpose of this bill is as follows: (1) To include
political contributions from lobbyists as being prohibited items
for public officials to accept; (2) to provide that certain nominal
items may be accepted by public officials without solicitation; (3)
to provide that lobbyists are not required to report unreimbursed
expenses incurred during travel; (4) to require employers of
lobbyists to fulfill certain reporting requirements; and (5) to
require lobbyists to report their compensation; and (6) to provide
that lobbyists or their employers cannot purchase meals or
beverages for a particular public official but may have one annual
reception costing not more than five thousand dollars for the
Legislature and general public. The bill also deletes a
substantial portion of existing law.

Strike-throughs indicate language that would be stricken from
the present law, and underscoring indicates new language that would
be added.

§6B-3-4a is new; therefore, strike-throughs and underscoring
have been omitted.