Mr. Vincent Tilford, President Arkansas Development Finance Authority 100 Main Street, Suite 200 Little Rock, Arkansas 72203
Dear Mr. Tilford:
This is in response to your request for an opinion regarding A.C.A. §
(a) Persons whose principal function in state employment is to apply for or assist in the preparation of applications for state or federal grants shall not, for a period of one (1) year after leaving state employment, assist, for compensation, other persons applying for grants of state or federal funds.
(b) Any person violating this section shall be subject to a fine not exceeding five thousand dollars ($5,000).
Enclosed with your correspondence are copies of letters sent by Mr. John Harris, an Assistant Attorney General who represents both the Arkansas Development Finance Authority (ADFA) and the Arkansas Industrial Development Commission (AIDC), to Mr. Robert Middleton, Mr. Harold Hunter and Ms. Jane Ahrend in which the following is stated:
Arkansas Industrial Development Commission (AIDC) has been informed from the Arkansas Development Finance Authority (ADFA) that you have assisted in the preparation of applications for grants under the HOME program.1
I must remind you that pursuant to A.C.A. §
21-12-101 (1987) you are prohibited for one year after you left employment with AIDC to assist other individuals applying for grants of state or federal funds. If AIDC determines that any future violations of A.C.A. §21-12-101 has occurred, we will be forced to file a complaint against you. [Emphasis in original.]
In your correspondence, you state that after the aforementioned letters were sent, ADFA contacted Mr. Harris and informed him that ADFA was not aware of any grant applicants receiving assistance from the individuals named in the letters. You also state that ADFA has not received a grant application from Hunter Company, Inc., a nonprofit corporation, for HOME funds but that Hunter Company, Inc. has applied for and been granted CHDO status, which you indicate is a special type of status awarded to nonprofit corporations under the HOME program.2 You further state that Mr. Harris indicated in the letters sent to the individuals named above that A.C.A. §
If Hunter Company, Inc. applies for funds on their own behalf and their application meets all program requirements, should they be denied access to those funds based on A.C.A. §
21-12-101 or any other section of the Arkansas Code Annotated?
With respect to this matter, it is my understanding that the Hunter Company was founded and incorporated by Mr. Harold Hunter and that Ms. Jane Ahrend and Mr. Robert Middleton are employees of, or at least associated in some formal capacity with, Hunter Company, Inc. It is also my understanding that Mr. Hunter, Ms. Ahrend and Mr. Middleton are former employees of AIDC and that their primary responsibilities while at AIDC consisted of preparing applications for state and federal grants. Additionally, although you state in your correspondence that ADFA has not "received an application from the Hunter nonprofit organization for HOME funds," it is my understanding that Hunter Company, Inc. has, in fact, made such an application. Since it is indicated that Hunter Company, Inc. has been certified as a CHDO, I assume that the Hunter application is for funds from the minimum fifteen percent set-aside, as discussed in footnote 2 of this opinion. Furthermore, it is my understanding that Mr. Middleton and Ms. Ahrend assisted in the preparation of this grant application.
If the foregoing is a correct statement of the facts in this case, it is my opinion that Mr. Middleton and Ms. Ahrend could be subject to the $5,000 fine set forth in A.C.A. §
While it is my opinion that Mr. Hunter, Mr. Middleton and Ms. Ahrend could be subject to the fine set forth in A.C.A. §
The foregoing opinion, which I hereby approve, was prepared by Assistant Attorney General Nancy A. Hall.
Sincerely,
WINSTON BRYANT Attorney General
WB:NAH/cyh
