Avoiding the appearance of
impropriety used to be a matter of concern, especially for elected officials.
Back in the olden days, a mayor or a congressman wouldn’t appoint his biggest
campaign donor’s wayward progeny to a high paying job they were utterly unqualified
for, because of ethical issues AND the appearance of impropriety.
Every now and then we give ethics a workout. Congressman Frank Guinta’s foolish
acceptance of campaign funds from mommy was a thorny ethics problem for him,
especially when he so vociferously called former Congresswoman Carol
Shea-Porter a liar for actually pointing out HIS lies.
On the big stuff we sometimes
pay attention. But when it comes to the small, ongoing questionable matters of
ethics and conflict of interest, we don’t pay that much attention. Especially
when it comes to New Hampshire’s 400 person volunteer legislature. The sheer
number of legislators is problematic in itself. The other big problem is that
there aren’t many investigative reporters working in our state any more.
Newspapers are cutting back on staff, and trying to figure out how to survive
and go forward into a very uncertain media future. In other words, nobody is
really watching over the conflicts of interest our 400 state representatives
and 24 senators may or may not have.
Are there conflicts of
interest? Let’s take a look at a few bills.
HB 1554 is a bill to establish a sports lottery in NH. There would be lottery
games for which one would purchase a ticket. There would also be lottery game
machines. The licenses for this sports
lottery would be issued to individuals who have valid liquor licenses.
As it happens, the lead
sponsor of HB 1554 is Representative Adam Schroadter, who owns a place that has
live music, serves food and liquor.
HB 1252 is a bill that would
permit employers to pay their employees either weekly or biweekly. An employer
could petition the labor commissioner to pay even less frequently than that,
although it would have to be once a month.
Many low wage workers work a couple of part time jobs. These are folks scraping
to get by. Paying them even less frequently isn’t going to help them out any. Worse,
though – is the impact this can have on tipped employees. Some restaurant/bar
owners include credit card tips left for servers in their paychecks. This means
a server might have to wait 2 weeks to get their tips. Given that the tipped
wage is 45% of the minimum wage of $7.25 in NH, these folks aren’t paying their
rent with their hourly wage. It does, however, benefit the employer who will
spend less doing payroll and cutting checks for employees.
The lead sponsor of this bill is Representative Laurie Sanborn. She and her
husband, State Senator Andy Sanborn own a sports bar in Concord. Representative
Adam Schroadter is a sponsor, and so is Representative Keith Murphy. He owns a
bar in Manchester.
HB 1540 is an act relative to
shipments of beer. Sponsors? Murphy and Schroadter. HB 114 establishes beer
specialty licenses. Sponsors? Murphy.
Murphy is a member of the
Free State Project, those wacky armed miscreants moving to NH to take over our
state government and threaten secession. The Free State Project party line is
that the libertarians are coming to leave you alone! They want small
government! Government small enough to benefit their own businesses and those
of their allies.
No one said boo when Rep. Dan McGuire (R. Free State) sponsored a bill that
would have caused taxpayers to foot the bill for the millions that would be required
to move the Suncook River back after it jumped its streambed during a big
storm. It wasn’t a feasible project, according to engineers, but McGuire went
ahead. That his house is on the bank of the former riverbed was surely just a
coincidence. It seems we don’t really pay much attention to conflicts of
interest, and the “appearance of impropriety” is a quaint notion from the past.
The New
Hampshire General Court Ethics Booklet is a useful publication. From Part One:
Public Office As A Public Trust
Legislators should treat their office as
a public trust, only using the powers and resources of public office to advance
public interests, and not to attain personal benefits or pursue any other
private interest incompatible with the public good.
This
sounds as if legislators shouldn’t be writing bills to benefit themselves or
their own businesses. Hmmm. Will these restaurant and bar owners abstain from
voting on their own bills? The odds that they will are slim to none – and slim
is out of town.
There
are a number of minimum wage bills, including bills that would increase the
tipped minimum wage. All business owners should abstain from voting on these
bills – especially owners of businesses in the hospitality industry. It’s the
only industry where customers are expected to directly pay the wages of the
staff. Imagine if you had to tip your bank teller or pharmacist. Owners love to
howl that if they had to pay employees a decent wage they’d have to raise their
prices sky high. As anyone who has ever traveled knows, other countries seem to
make it work. Not only does it work - they all have single payer health care.
Damned socialist hellholes.
In
other news, the first in the nation primary is upon us. The calls, the door
knocking, the mailings, and the ads…oh, it’s almost over.
Given
that this is NH, I expect most readers have met at least one candidate, and
been to events, and done some reading and talking and thinking about who to
vote for. I hope you’ll all find time to
exercise the franchise on February 9th. The NH legislature continues
to try to solve the non-existent problem of voter fraud by attempting to make
voter participation increasingly difficult. Vote while you still can.
The primary circus will leave
town, and we can get down to the serious business of our state elections. As
big and colorful as the primary stuff is, the folks we elect to our local,
county, and state governments have a much bigger impact on our daily lives than
the president does. Thanks to Citizens United, the cash spigot will be flowing
in ways we’ve never seen or imagined. We will all need to pay close attention.
This was published as an op-ed in the February 4, 2016 issue of the Conway Daily Sun.