ALASKA'S NEWSPAPER

| Updated: 8:27 PM

Legislative briefs

Proposal lays out when state pays for executive travel

BILL: Legal fees would also be reimbursed if official is exonerated in ethics fight.

JUNEAU -- The Alaska Legislature, not someone within the executive branch, should write the ethics rules that apply to that branch, an Anchorage lawmaker said this week.

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State Rep. Max Gruenberg, a Democrat, is sponsoring a bill discussed in committee laying out when the state will pay for executive branch travel for officials and family members. It also says the state can reimburse officials for legal fees for fighting an ethics complaint -- if the official is exonerated.

The attorney general created similar regulations that passed legislative review Feb. 8, though Gruenberg said it should come from the Legislature to avoid the appearance of a conflict of interest.

Attorney General Dan Sullivan was appointed to office by then-Gov. Sarah Palin, who left office last summer citing, in part, the costs of fighting ethics complaints against her.

Sullivan's rules would automatically go into effect unless lawmakers pass superseding law.

Both sets of rules address fuzzy ethics areas raised by complaints during Palin's administration. The former Republican vice presidential candidate resigned midway through her first term, complaining of the financial toll from more than 20 ethics complaints filed against her.

Palin said she amassed more than $500,000 in legal fees battling the complaints, most of which were dismissed. But from one of the complaints, Palin reimbursed the state for some of her children's travels.

Under Gruenberg's bill, HB 289, the state would pay for the governor and lieutenant governor's family travel if the person is required for official state action, is attending as an official representative of the state, or for a state-sponsored event where the person's attendance is customary. Family members could accompany the governor or lieutenant governor to events on important state issues if invited in advance and attendance is customary.

Short of those conditions, family members could still accompany the governor or lieutenant governor as long as the state is reimbursed for their share of travel.

House State Affairs Committee Chair Bob Lynn, R-Anchorage, said he will pass the bill out of committee pending minor amendments. "It's a very important bill," Lynn said. "It needs to get done for the current governor and succeeding governors."

Meanwhile, Rep. David Guttenberg, D-Fairbanks, sponsored a separate bill that would require the state be reimbursed for all travels by the governor or lieutenant governor's family members. Gruenberg doesn't agree with that approach.

"In the case of the Palins, it would have been harsh," Gruenberg said.

Lynn has not scheduled a committee hearing for Guttenberg's bill.

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