Ms. Ann Hines Executive Vice President Arkansas Oil Marketers Association P.O. Box 229 Little Rock, AR 72203
Dear Ms. Hines:
You have requested several opinions pursuant to the authority under Initiated Act 1 of 1988 which is cited as "The Disclosure Act for Lobbyists and State Officials". I will restate your questions and render my opinions in the order listed.
Your first question is as follows:
Under what circumstances should a corporation be registered as a lobbyist as opposed to an individual employee being the registered lobbyist?
Initiated Act 1 of 1988 defines the term lobbyist at Section
(1) receives income or reimbursement in a combined amount of $250 or more in a calendar quarter for lobbying; or
(2) expends $250 or more in a calendar quarter for lobbying excluding the cost of personal travel, lodging, meals, or dues; or
(3) expends $250 or more in a calendar quarter including, postage, for the express purposes of soliciting others to communicate with any public official, to influence any legislative action or administrative action unless the communication has been filed with the Secretary of State or the communication has been published in the news media. If the communication is filed with the Secretary of State, the filing shall include the approximate number of recipients".
The term "person" is defined in Section
It is my opinion that the individual employees or agents of the corporate entity who engage in lobbying activities must also register as a lobbyist, however, these individuals would not be required to file a lobbyist activity report because the monies expended would be corporate monies and accordingly would be disclosed in the corporate lobbyist activity report.
Your next question is as follows:
Our association has a number of members who are legislators and members of state boards or commissions or the spouse of a legislator or member of a board or commission. Do I report these as "business associations"? All paid dues to belong to AOMA.
Section
If your association has various public officials as members, it is my opinion that this fact should be disclosed in the required lobbyist activity report, assuming the public officials are object of your association's lobbying effort. If your association has members who are also members of state boards or commissions, it is my opinion that this fact should be disclosed in the lobbyist activity report. In my opinion the law does not require disclosure of any business association or partnership with the spouse of any public official.
Your next question is as follows:
If I ask members of this association to call legislators on an issue and they call a representative and or a senator that does not represent their district, are they considered a lobbyist and do they have to register?
With regard to this question I refer you to the definition of lobbyist previously cited in this opinion. If members of your association were requested to contact legislators, this in and of itself would not constitute lobbying unless those individuals either received or expended monies in a calendar quarter in excess of $250 under the circumstances outlined in the definition. A person, in my opinion, can be a lobbyist even though the legislator who is being lobbied lives outside the district of the lobbyist. There is no exemption within Initiated Act 1 of 1988 which would dispense with the necessity of registration or the filing of the lobbyist activity report simply because the legislator lives outside the district of the lobbyist.
Your next question is as follows:
If I alert the AOMA Officers and Directors of an issue and I ask for their help in influencing legislation and ask that they call other AOMA members and alert them to the issue and ask their help, will the Board Members have to register as lobbyists?
Again I refer to the definition of the term lobbyist previously cited in this opinion. The term "lobbying" is defined in Section
Your next question is as follows:
AOMA has an attorney who writes legislation at our direction and who appears at legislative hearings as needed. He is a registered lobbyist Are his fees a reportable expense on my disclosure form?
Section
If your attorney only engages in the activities posed in your question, it is my opinion that the attorney would not have to register as a lobbyist pursuant to the above cited exemptions in Initiated Act 1 of 1988. A close examination of your attorney's activities would be necessary to determine if registration were required. If registration were required of your attorney, it is my opinion that the fees paid the attorney would not be reportable on your lobbyist activity report. Section
the report shall contain: (a) the total of all expenditures made or incurred by the registered lobbyist on or on behalf of the registered lobbyist by his or her employer during the preceding period.
It is my opinion that fees paid to registered lobbyists by their principals or employers are not required to be reported in the lobbyist activity report. I interpret this law to require disclosure of those expenditures which have the potential for influencing legislative or administrative action. Since fees paid to lobbyists do not in any way benefit the object of the lobbying effort, disclosure of same would not assist the general public in assessing the potential influence on the public official or legislator in question and accordingly I am of the opinion that such expenditures are not required to be disclosed. For these same reasons the fees paid to your attorney for lobbying activities would not be reportable in your associations lobbyist activity report even if the payment was for activities performed by the attorney which would not exempt the attorney from registration. In addition
Your final question is as follows:
If this Association gave a gift with a value of over $10 to a legislator, is this reportable on my lobbyist disclosure form since in my position as Executive Vice President, I am responsible for financial matters? It would not be a gift from, me but from the Corporation.
Section
The foregoing opinion, which I hereby approve, was prepared by Deputy Attorney General Bill McLean.
