HomeMy WebLinkAbout1080 campaign reform actORDINANCE NO. 1080
ORDINANCE OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY
OF UKIAH ADDING CHAPTER 14, ENTITLED,
"UKIAH CAMPAIGN REFORM ACT," TO DIVISION
I OF THE UKIAH CITY CODE
The City Council of the City of Ukiah hereby ordains as follows:
SECTION ONE. CAMPAIGN REFORM ACT
A new Chapter 14, entitled, "Ukiah Campaign Reform Act," is hereby
added to the Ukiah City Code to read as follows.
CHAPTER 14
Ukiah Campaign Reform Act
Sections
2O75
2O76
2O77
2O78
2O79
2O8O
2081
2082
2083
2O84
2085
2086
2087
Title
Purpose
Relation to Political Reform Act of 1974
Definitions
Campaign Contribution Limitations
Election Cycles
Voluntary Spending Limits
Additional Disclosure Requirement
Deadline for Debt Retirement
Return of Contributions from Anonymous Donors
Disbursement of Unexpended Campaign Funds
Duties of the City Clerk
Enforcement and Penalties
§2075 TITLE: This Chapter shall be known and may be cited as
"The Ukiah Campaign Reform Act."
§2076 PURPOSE: The City Council declares that the purposes of this
Chapter are:
A. To prevent corruption and the appearance of corruption of the political process
by adopting realistic and enforceable campaign contribution limits.
B. To supplement the requirements of state law with regard to the reporting of
campaign contributions and expenditures in order to provide important additional
information to the voters in municipal elections about the contributions to political
campaigns in the City
C. To establish and encourage the acceptance of voluntary campaign spending
limits in order to reduce the influence of money in municipal elections and to
increase participation in the political process.
§2077 RELATION TO POLITICAL REFORM ACT OF 1974: This
Chapter is intended to supplement the Political Reform Act of 1974.
Unless a word or term is specifically defined in this Chapter, or the contrary is
stated or clearly appears from the context, words and terms used herein shall
have the same meaning as defined or used in Title 9 of the California
Government Code, in which the Political Reform Act of 1974 is codified, and as
supplemented by the Regulations of the Fair Political Practices Commission as
set forth in Title 2, Division 6 of the California Code of Regulation, as the same
may be, from time to time, amended. Among the terms defined in Political
Reform Act (see Chapter 2, Title 9 of the Government Code, commencing with
Section 82000) and used throughout this Chapter are "commission,"
"contribution, .... expenditure," "independent expenditure" and "person."
§2078 DEFINITIONS: As used in this Chapter the following words shall
have the following meaning, unless the context clearly requires a
different meaning.
A. "Ballot measure" means a measure on the ballot in a City Election for adoption
in the City only, whether by initiative, referendum or by the city council.
B. "Campaign Expenditure" means an expenditure for election-related activities
for both Candidates and ballot measures, which include, but are not limited to,
the following:
(1) Communications that contain express advocacy of the nomination or
election of a candidate or the qualification or approval of a ballot measure,
or the defeat of a candidate or ballot measure.
(2) Communications that contain reference to the candidate's
qualifications, candidacy, election campaign, or similar references with
respect to the candidate's opponent or a ballot measure.
(3) Solicitation of contributions to the candidate or to third persons for use
in support of the candidate or in opposition to his or her opponent, and
similar solicitations for or in opposition to a ballot measure.
(4) Arranging, coordinating, developing, writing, distributing, preparing, or
planning of any communication or activity described in clauses (1), (2), or
(3), above.
(5) Recruiting or coordinating campaign activities of campaign volunteers
on behalf of the candidate or a ballot measure.
(6) Preparing campaign budgets.
(7) Preparing campaign finance disclosure statements.
(8) Communications directed to voters or potential voters as part of
activities encouraging or assisting persons to vote if the communication
contains express advocacy of the nomination or election of the candidate
or the defeat of his or her opponent, or for or in opposition to a ballot
measure.
C. "Candidate" means any person who is a candidate for any elective office in the
City of Ukiah, including incumbent office holders, appointed or elected, whether
or not a candidate for reelection.
D. "City" means the City of Ukiah.
E. "City Clerk" means the City Clerk of the City.
F. "City Committee" means a Controlled committee or an Independent
expenditure committee
G. "City Election" means any general or special municipal election in the City of
Ukiah, including a recall election or a City municipal election which is
consolidated with another election.
H. "Controlled committee" means a committee that is controlled directly or
indirectly by a Candidate or proponent or opponent of a City ballot measure,
including a recall petition, or that acts jointly with a Candidate, Controlled
committee, or City ballot measure proponent or opponent in connection with the
making of expenditures. A Candidate or ballot measure proponent or opponent
controls a committee if he or she, his or her agent, or any other committee he or
she controls has a significant influence on the actions or decisions of the
committee.
I. "Election Cycle" means the applicable period as set forth in Section 2080.
J. "Independent expenditure committee" means a committee established
primarily to make independent expenditures in a City Election.
§2079
CAMPAIGN CONTRIBUTION LIMITATIONS:
A. No person shall make and no Candidate or City Committee shall solicit or
accept any contribution which will cause the total contributions for Campaign
Expenditures from any person to that Candidate or committee to exceed $200.00
during any Election Cycle, except as provided in Section 2081.
B. The limits in subsection A. above shall also apply to any person who makes
and any City Committee which solicits or accepts contributions for the purpose of
making expenditures in support of or opposition to the recall of a candidate or to
the election of any candidate to succeed the candidate who is the subject of a
recall, except as provided in Section 2081.
C. All contributions made by any person or solicited or accepted by any
Candidate or City Committee during a special election cycle shall be attributed to
that election cycle and not to any other election cycle that may overlap.
D. The provisions of this section shall not apply to contributions by a Candidate
or the Candidate's spouse to the Candidate's own Controlled Committee.
E. Contributions by a married person shall be treated as the separate
contributions of such person and shall not be aggregated with any contributions
of the spouse of such person.
F. Contributions by children under 18 years of age shall be treated as
contributions by their parent(s) or legal guardian(s), and shall be attributed one-
half to each parent or guardian unless only one parent or guardian has legal
custody in which case any such contributions shall be attributed solely to the
custodial parent or guardian.
G. The contribution limits of this section apply to loans or extensions of credit to
the Candidate or City Committee, except as provided in Government Code
Section 85307.
§2080:
ELECTION CYCLES:
A. General Elections. For purposes of any general election, the Election Cycle
shall commence on January 1 of the year in which a City Election will occur and
end on December 31 of that year.
B. Special Elections. For purposes of any special election, the election cycle shall
mean the period commencing on the date a special election is called by the city
council and ending on the sixtieth day following said special election.
C. Recall Elections. For purposes of any recall election, the election cycle shall
mean the period commencing on the earlier of the date a City Committee in
support of a recall election files its statement of organization pursuant to
Government Code Section 84101, or the date the notice of intention is served
pursuant to Elections Code Section 11021 or published pursuant to Elections
Code Section 11022 (whichever occurs first), and ending on the sixtieth day
following the first to occur of any of the following:
1. The time provided by law for the gathering of signatures on recall
petitions expires without sufficient recall petition signatures having been
filed with the City Clerk to require a recall election;
2. All committees formed in support of the recall have been terminated
pursuant to the provisions of the Political Reform Act;
3. The date the recall election is held.
§2081: VOLUNTARY SPENDING LIMIT:A Candidate or City
Committee may elect to comply with the voluntary spending limits
as set forth in this Section 2081.
A. A Candidate or City Committee which voluntarily accepts expenditure limits
may not make Campaign Expenditures in excess of the limits set forth in
subsection C, below. Campaign Expenditures by a Candidate and his or her
Controlled Committee shall be aggregated.
B. Each Candidate and each City Committee shall indicate on a form provided by
the City Clerk his, her or its acceptance or rejection of the voluntary spending
limits as established under Subsection C, below. At a minimum, the form shall (1)
state the voluntary spending limit then in effect, (2) the benefits of acceptance of
the voluntary spending limit, and (3) contain an agreement to comply with the
requirements of this Section 2081. Said form shall be filed with the City Clerk at
the same time that a Candidate files his or her nomination paper and verified
statement of acceptance pursuant to Elections Code Section 10224 or that a City
Committee files its statement of organization pursuant to Government Code
Section 84101.
C. For the November 2006 City Election, the spending limit is $5,000.00. This
voluntary spending limit shall apply to future elections, but may be adjusted
periodically by resolution of the city council to reflect increases or decreases in
City population and the Consumer Price Index since August 2006.
D. For candidates and City Committees accepting the voluntary spending limit,
the following benefits apply:
1. The contribution limitation in Section 2079.A is increased from $200.00
to $500.00.
2. Except for recall elections, the voluntary spending limit for any
Candidate opposing an incumbent shall be increased by 25%.
3. The City will pay for one-half the cost of the Candidate's statement of
qualifications as printed in the ballot pamphlet.
4. Within one week of the filing deadline, the City will issue a news release,
describing the purpose and benefits of the program, and announcing the
Candidates and City Committees which have accepted the voluntary
spending limit.
5. The City's website will designate the Candidate and City Committee
accepting the voluntary spending limit as a "Voluntary Spending Limit
Candidate/Committee," and display the Candidate's photo and up to a 500
word statement from each participating Candidate and City Committee.
6. Each participating Candidate and City Committee may use the
designation "Voluntary Spending Limit Candidate/Committee" in all
election/campaign materials and in the Candidate's ballot pamphlet
statement of qualifications.
7. Candidates and their Controlled Committees may carry over funds from
one election cycle to the next, if, within the first three days of the next
Election Cycle, the Candidate or committee files a statement with the City
Clerk accepting the voluntary spending limit applicable to that Election
Cycle. If the Candidate or committee does not file the required statement,
all funds carried over from the previous Election Cycle shall be disbursed
pursuant to Section 2085 within seven days after the beginning of that
subsequent Election Cycle.
8. Each participating Candidate and City Committee may include an
additional 500 word statement on the City website if an opposing
Candidate or City Committee rejects the voluntary spending limit.
E. A Candidate or City Committee which files a notice accepting the voluntary
spending limit may not thereafter reject the limit, except that if an opposing
Candidate or City Committee files a statement rejecting the voluntary spending
limit, the Candidate or City Committee may file a statement with the City Clerk
rescinding its acceptance of the voluntary spending limits within three days after
the final date that nomination papers can be filed.
F. Any candidate who files a statement of acceptance pursuant to subsection B,
above, and makes Campaign Expenditures in excess of the limits shall be
subject to the remedies in Section 2086.
§2082:
ADDITIONAL DISCLOSURE REQUIREMENT:
A. Each Candidate and City Committee shall file a third pre-election Campaign
Disclosure Statement (Form 460 or any successor form thereto), as provided by
the commission for the period from the end of the second pre-election statement
and ending at 11:59 p.m. on the fourth business day preceding election day
(normally Thursday). Such disclosure shall be filed with the City Clerk no later
than 1:00 p.m. on the third business day preceding election day and shall be
posted to the City's website by 5:00 p.m. of the day received, or as soon
thereafter as may be practicable.
B. Notwithstanding the amounts specified in Government Code Section 82036,
each Candidate or City Committee shall file a late contributions report with the
City Clerk which reports all contributions of $200.00 or more received from any
source during the period commencing at the end of the period covered in the last
campaign statement required pursuant to subsection A, above, and ending on
midnight of the date of the election. This report shall be filed with the City Clerk
within twenty-four hours of the receipt of the contribution and shall be posted to
the City website within four hours of the filing or as soon thereafter as may be
practicable.
§2083:
DEADLINE FOR DEBT RETIREMENT:
A. No person shall make, and no Candidate or City Committee shall solicit or
accept any contribution, including for the purpose of debt retirement, after the
end of any Election Cycle.
B. Any candidate or committee shall retire all campaign related debts by the end
of the Election Cycle.
C. Any campaign related debt, which remains unpaid after the end of the Election
Cycle, is deemed to have been a campaign contribution which was accepted at
the time the debt was incurred. Any such contribution which causes the
contribution by any person or to any Candidate or City Committee from any
person to exceed the applicable contribution limits in this Chapter shall constitute
a violation of this Chapter; provided, however, that failure by a person to collect a
debt shall not constitute a violation of this Chapter for the creditor, if the creditor
has made substantial attempts, in good faith, to collect the debt.
§2084:
DONORS:
RETURN OF CONTRIBUTIONS FROM ANONYMOUS
A. Not later than 14 days after its receipt, a Candidate or City Committee shall
return or disburse to the City for deposit into the general fund of the City, or to
one or more non-profit organizations determined by the Internal Revenue Service
to be tax exempt under Internal Revenue Code Section 501 (c)(3) ("Charitable
Organization") any contribution of more than twenty dollars ($20.00) for which the
Candidate or committee does not have on file in the records of the Candidate or
committee the name, address, occupation, and employer of the contributor (an
"Anonymous Contribution").
B. A Candidate or City Committee shall not accept and by the end of any
required filing period or Election Cycle shall return or disburse to the City or a
Charitable Organization Anonymous Contributions, where the total of such
contributions exceeds ten percent (10%) of the total funds raised during that filing
period or Election Cycle by that Candidate or City Committee.
§2085: DISBURSEMENT OF UNEXPENDED CAMPAIGN FUNDS:
Except as otherwise permitted by Section 2081 .C.7, any
Candidate or City Committee that has an unexpended campaign surplus shall,
within three days of the close of an Election Cycle, disburse the whole of the
surplus either to the City for deposit into the general fund of the City, or to one or
more Charitable Organizations.
§2086:
other
Clerk shall:
DUTIES OF THE CITY CLERK: In addition to any
duties required of the City Clerk under this Chapter, the City
A. Prescribe and furnish forms required to be filed by this Chapter;
B. Determine whether required statements, declarations and forms have been
filed and, if so, whether they conform on their face with the requirements of this
Chapter, including whether they are sufficiently legible for purposes of scanning
onto the City's website;
C. Promptly notify all persons who have failed to file a statement in the form and
at the time required by this Chapter.
D. Arrange for the prompt scanning to the City's website of all statements and
reports filed pursuant to Sections 2081 and 2082, and the pre-election
statements required of Candidates or City Committees by the Political Reform
Act in Title 9, Chapter 4, Article 2 of the Government Code, commencing with
Section 84200.
E. Report, in writing, apparent violations of this Chapter to the City Attorney.
§2087:
ENFORCEMENT AND PENALTIES:
A. Misdemeanor. Any person who knowingly or willfully violates any provision of
this Chapter is guilty of a misdemeanor.
1. In addition to other penalties provided by law, a fine in the amounts as
specified in subsection E, below, may be imposed.
2. Prosecution for violation of this Chapter must be commenced within four
years after the date on which the violation occurred.
B. Right to Cure Violation. A Candidate or City Committee which accepts a
contribution in violation of this Chapter shall not be penalized, if the Candidate or
committee returns the contribution or contributes it to the City general fund or to a
Charitable Organization within 7 days of its receipt.
C. Separate violations. Each contribution, acceptance, or solicitation of a
contribution that is in violation of this Chapter and each failure to report a
contribution or expenditure that is required to be reported by this Chapter shall
constitute a separate violation.
D. Joint and severable liability. If two or more persons are responsible for any
violation, they shall be jointly and severally liable therefor.
E. Civil penalty. Any person who violates any provision of this Chapter is liable in
a civil action brought by the City Attorney or by a registered voter of the City for
the following amounts for each such violation:
1. For the making, accepting or expending of any contribution or
expenditure in excess of the applicable limits specified in this Chapter, a
sum equal to three times the amount by which the contribution or
expenditure exceeds the applicable contribution limit, or $500.00,
whichever is greater.
2. For failure to file the additional disclosures required by Section 2082,
the greater of $100.00 per calendar day after the specified deadline, until
the filing is made, or $500.00, whichever is greater.
3. For all other violations, a sum not to exceed $2,500.00.
No civil action under this subsection E may be filed against a person if the
criminal prosecutor is maintaining a criminal action against that person pursuant
to subsection A.
F. Private riqht of action - prerequisites. Any person, before filing a civil action
pursuant to subsection E, must first file with the City Attorney a written request
for the City Attorney to commence the action. The request shall include a
statement of the grounds for believing a cause of action exists. The City Attorney
shall respond to the person in writing, indicating whether he or she intends to file
a civil action.
1. If the City Attorney responds in the affirmative and files suit within 120
days from receipt of the written request to commence the action, no other
action may be brought unless the action brought by the City Attorney is
dismissed without prejudice.
2. If the City Attorney responds in the negative or fails to respond within
120 days from receipt of the written request to commence the action, the
person requesting the action may proceed to file a civil action upon receipt
of the response or 120 days from the City Attorney's receipt of the request,
whichever occurs first, and shall within 10 days of filing the complaint,
serve a copy on the City Attorney.
3. In any action brought pursuant to subsection E, above, the plaintiff shall
be entitled to retain 50% of the civil penalties recovered from the
defendant and shall deposit with the City Clerk for deposit into the City's
general fund 50% of any such penalties so recovered.
G. Iniunctive relief. The City Attorney or a registered voter in the City may bring
an action to enjoin a violation of this Chapter or to compel compliance with a
provision of this Chapter
H. Attorneys fees and costs. In an action brought by the City Attorney to enforce
the provisions of this Chapter, costs and attorneys' fees shall be recoverable
pursuant to Section 2053. In any civil action brought by a City voter pursuant to
subsection F.2 or G, the prevailing party shall be entitled to recover from the
other party his or her costs of litigation, including reasonable attorney's fees.
I. Disqualification. In addition to any other penalties prescribed by law, if an
official receives a contribution in violation of this Chapter, the official shall not be
permitted to make, participate in making or in any way attempt to use his or her
official position to influence a governmental decision in which the contributor has
a financial interest. The provisions of Government Code Section 87100 et seq.
and the regulations of the Fair Political Practices Commission shall apply to
interpretations of this subsection.
SECTION TWO.
The City Council shall review this Ukiah Campaign Reform Act within six
months after the November 2006 election to determine whether any changes
should be made.
SECTION THREE.
1. SEVERABILITY. If any provision of this ordinance or the application
thereof to any person or circumstance is held invalid, the remainder of the
ordinance and the application of such provision to other persons or
circumstances shall not be affected thereby. The City Council hereby declares
that it would have adopted this Ordinance and any section, subsection, sentence,
clause or phrase thereof irrespective of the fact that any one or more sections,
]0
subsections, sentences, clauses or phrases be declared unconstitutional or
otherwise invalid.
2. EFFECTIVE DATE. This Ordinance shall be published as required by
law in a newspaper of general circulation in the City of Ukiah, and shall become
effective thirty (30) days after its adoption.
Introduced by title only on June 7, 2006, by the following roll call vote:
AYES:Councilmembers McCowen, Rodin, and Baldwin.
NOES: Councilmember Crane and Mayor Ashiku.
ABSENT: None.
ABSTAIN: None.
Adopted on June 14, 2006 by the following roll call vote:
AYES: Councilmembers McCowen, Rodin, and Baldwin.
NOES: Councilmember Crane and Mayor Ashiku.
ABSENT: None.
ABSTAIN: None t~ ...~.
..l~rk Ashiku, Mayor
ATTEST:
Marie Ulvila, City Clerk