First Quarter 2000
Quarterly Report on Lobbyist Activity
First Quarter 2000
Summary of Earnings and Activity of Registered Lobbyists
First Quarter 2000
Introduction
The Regulation of Lobbyists Ordinance ("Ordinance"), San Francisco Administrative Code Sections 16.520-16.531, requires individuals and entities that qualify as lobbyists to register with the Ethics Commission and file quarterly activity reports. Forty-nine lobbyists filed reports with the City and County of San Francisco on April 17, 2000, detailing their lobbyist activity during the First Quarter of 2000 (January 1 - March 31). One lobbyist, AT&T-BIS, failed to file a report.1 The Ethics Commission has compiled this information in its First Quarter 2000 Summary of Earnings and Activity of Lobbyists Registered with the City.
The Lobbyist Ordinance
The Ordinance provides that there are three kinds of lobbyists: contract lobbyists, business and organization lobbyists, and expenditure lobbyists.
Contract lobbyists are individuals or entities that are hired to influence local legislative or administrative action on another’s behalf. Contract lobbyists must register with the Ethics Commission when they earn $3,200 or more in any consecutive three months in exchange for lobbying services OR when they have at least 25 separate contacts with City officers in any two consecutive months for the purpose of influencing local legislative or administrative action. Clients and employees of contract lobbyists are not themselves contract lobbyists and are not subject to the registration and reporting requirements of the Lobbyist Ordinance.
Business & organization lobbyists are entities that lobby on their own behalf. Business and organization lobbyists may include for-profit and non-profit corporations and organizations, associations, and unions. An entity qualifies as a business and organization lobbyist if the entity pays employees or members any amount to lobby on its behalf AND the employees or members have at least 25 separate contacts with City officers, within a two-month period, for the purpose of influencing legislative or administrative action. Individual employees and members of business and organization lobbyists do not themselves qualify as lobbyists and are not subject to the registration and reporting requirements of the Lobbyist Ordinance.
Expenditure lobbyists are entities which spend, directly or indirectly, more than $3,200 within any three consecutive months to influence local legislative or administrative action. Payments made to contract lobbyists and other paid advocates do not count toward the $3,200 threshold,
nor do dues payments, donations, and other payments to any business and organization lobbyist or expenditure lobbyist.
Each lobbyist must file with the Ethics Commission quarterly reports containing information about payments made or received in order to influence local legislative or administrative action, actions each lobbyist sought to influence, activity expenses incurred, political contributions of $100 or more made or delivered by the filer or made by a client at the behest of a filer to a City officer, candidate or committee, City contracts awarded, payments made in exchange for campaign consulting services, and the names of each City officer employed or retained by the filer or by a client of the filer.
City Officers include: elected officials, the Controller, the City Administrator, department heads, members of City boards and commissions, members of the Board of Education, members of the Governing Board of the Community College District, members of the Housing Authority, members of the Redevelopment Agency, members of the Transportation Authority, the Superintendent of Schools, the Clerk of the Municipal Court and the Secretary and Jury Commissioner of the Superior Court.
Local legislative or administrative action includes, but is not limited to, the drafting, introduction, consideration, modification, enactment, defeat, approval, veto, granting or denial by any officer of the City and County of any resolution, motion, appeal, application, petition, nomination, ordinance, amendment, approval, referral, permit, license or entitlement to use.
Contents of First Quarter 2000 Summary Report
Amendments to the Fourth Quarter 1999 Report
This section details changes filers have made to their Fourth Quarter 1999 quarterly reports.
Table 1: All Reported Activity
Table 1 provides a summary of all reported activity by lobbyists (hereinafter "filers") for the first quarter of 2000. The table summarizes payments promised to and received by contract lobbyists in exchange for lobbyist services, payments made by business & organization and expenditure lobbyists to influence local legislative and administrative action, political contributions made, delivered or arranged by a filer or made by a client at a filer’s behest, and activity expenses incurred by filers. Filers are listed in alphabetical order, and all amounts (for Table 1 and for all charts and tables) have been rounded to the nearest dollar.
Chart 1: Payments to Contract Lobbyists Promised by and Received From Clients
Chart 1 depicts payments that contract lobbyists report as having been promised or received during the first quarter. Contract lobbyists who had no reportable activity during the quarter are not included in the chart. The total promised payments reported by filers was $771,004. The total reported payments received was $1,133,208.
Chart 2: Payments Made by Business & Organization and Expenditure Lobbyists to Influence Local Legislative and Administrative Action
Chart 2 depicts payments business & organization and expenditure lobbyists report having made to influence local legislative or administrative action. Filers who made no payments are not included in the chart. The total reported payments made was $211,343.
Table 2: Political Contributions
Filers must report all political contributions of $100 or more made, delivered or arranged by the filer, or made by a client at the behest of the filer. Table 2 lists candidates and committees that received a political contribution from a filer and/or a filer’s client during the first quarter. The total reported political contributions given by filers during the first quarter was $99,151.
Table 3: Activity Expenses
All filers must report activity expenses. An activity expense is any expense incurred or payment made by a lobbyist (or others specified in the Ordinance) which benefits a City officer, a candidate for City office, a family member thereof (including domestic partners), or aides to members of the Board of Supervisors. Activity expenses include gifts, honoraria, consulting fees, salaries, and any other form of economic compensation totaling more than $30 in value in a consecutive three-month period.
Table 3 lists activity expenses reported by filers, the total of which includes salaries paid to employees who also serve as City officers. The table lists the filer, salaries paid, the date of the activity expense, the name and official title or position of each beneficiary of the expense and a description of the benefit conferred. The table also includes the total cost of the activity, the portion of the total cost of the activity which represents the value of the benefit conferred on each beneficiary and the name of the payee of the expense if it is different from that of the beneficiary. The total reported amount of activity expenses during the first quarter was $20,892, of which more than $20,000 was attributed to salaries.
Table 4: Gift Tickets and Admissions
Filers are required to report gift tickets and gift admissions to political fund-raisers and events sponsored by 501(c)(3) non-profit organizations given to City officers. Table 4 shows each reported gift ticket and/or admission given to a City officer. The table gives the date and description of the political or charitable event and the name and official title of the beneficiary of the gift ticket and/or admission. Four lobbyists reporting giving gifts during the reporting period.
Table 5: City Contracts Awarded
Filers must report certain City contracts they were awarded during the reporting period. Table 5 lists the type of contract awarded (rendition of personal services; furnishing of any material, supplies or equipment to or from the City; or sale or lease of land or buildings to or by the City, or financing of the same), the date the contract was approved, the name of the City officer and Department that approved the contract, and the subject matter of the contract. Three lobbyists reported receiving City contracts during the reporting period.
Table 6: Employment of City Officers or Employees
Filers must report the names of City officers or employees who have been employed or retained by the filer at any time during the reporting period. This table lists the name and position of the City officer and the services provided by the City officer to the filer. Filers must also report whether a City officer or employee has been employed or retained by a client of the filer at the behest of the filer at any time during the reporting period. Filers in this case must list the name of the client and that of the City officer. One lobbyist reported that it employed City officers during the reporting period.
Table 7: Payments for Campaign Consulting Services
Filers must report the total payments received from City officers during the reporting period in exchange for providing campaign consulting services (as defined in S.F. Admin. Code section 16.541). Such payments must be reported only if the filer contacted the officer within one year of the date of payment. No filer reported payments for campaign consulting services during the reporting period.
Table 8: Detailed Report of Payments to Contract Lobbyists
Table 8 details information about payments promised and made by clients to contract lobbyists. For each contract lobbyist, the report lists: the identity of each client, a description of the specific local legislative or administrative action the lobbyist sought to influence for each client, the City officer(s) and/or department(s) the filer contacted on the client’s behalf, and the reported payments promised by and received from clients during the reporting period. Clients for whom a filer performed no lobbyist activity are not included in the report. The total reported payments promised by clients of contract lobbyists was $771,004. The total reported payments received from clients of contract lobbyists was $1,133,208.
Table 9: Detailed Report of Payments Made by Business and Organization Lobbyists
Table 9 details information about payments made by business and organization lobbyists. For each business and organization lobbyist, the report lists: the total payments each filer made to influence local legislative or administrative action, the person or entity to whom the filer made each payment, a detailed description of the local legislative or administrative action the filer sought to influence with each payment, the City officer(s) or department(s) contacted pursuant to the legislative action, and the amount of each payment. The total reported payments made by business and organization lobbyists to influence local legislative and administrative action was $184,959.
Table 10: Detailed Report of Payments Made by Expenditure Lobbyists
Table 10 details information about payments made by expenditure lobbyists. For each expenditure lobbyist, the report lists: the total payments each filer made to influence local legislative or administrative action, the person or entity to whom the filer made each payment, a detailed description of the local legislative or administrative action the filer sought to influence with each payment, and the amount of each payment. The total reported payments made by expenditure lobbyists to influence local legislative or administrative action was $26,384.
________
1 All lobbyists are sent pre-deadline notices. Non-filers are subject to late fines. Information about late-filed reports from the first quarter of 2000 will be included as addenda in the next quarterly report.