HOUSE BILL 376

50th legislature - STATE OF NEW MEXICO - first session, 2011

INTRODUCED BY

Nate Gentry

 

 

 

 

 

AN ACT

RELATING TO ETHICS; LIMITING LOBBYING BY FORMER PUBLIC OFFICERS; REQUIRING ETHICS CONTINUING EDUCATION AND TRAINING FOR PUBLIC OFFICERS; MANDATING NOTARIZATION OF FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE STATEMENTS FILED BY CANDIDATES AND PUBLIC OFFICERS; CLARIFYING GIFT LIMITATIONS FOR STATE OFFICERS, EMPLOYEES AND CANDIDATES FOR STATE OFFICE; AMENDING SECTIONS OF THE NMSA 1978.

 

BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO:

     SECTION 1. Section 10-16-2 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1967, Chapter 306, Section 2, as amended) is amended to read:

     "10-16-2. DEFINITIONS.--As used in the Governmental Conduct Act:

          A. "business" means a corporation, partnership, sole proprietorship, firm, organization or individual carrying on a business;

          B. "confidential information" means information that by law or practice is not available to the public;

          C. "employee" means any person who is hired for any state office and who receives compensation in the form of salary or is eligible for per diem or mileage;

          [C.] D. "employment" means rendering of services for compensation in the form of salary as an employee;

          [D.] E. "family" means an individual's spouse, parents, children or siblings, by consanguinity or affinity;

          [E.] F. "financial interest" means an interest held by an individual or the individual's family that is:

                (1) an ownership interest in business; or

                (2) any employment or prospective employment for which negotiations have already begun;

          [F.] G. "official act" means an official decision, recommendation, approval, disapproval or other action that involves the use of discretionary authority;

          [G.] H. "public officer [or employee]" means any person who has been elected [to] or appointed to [or hired for] any state office and who receives compensation in the form of salary or is eligible for per diem or mileage but excludes legislators;

          [H.] I. "standards" means the conduct required by the Governmental Conduct Act;

          [I.] J. "state agency" means any branch, agency, instrumentality or institution of the state; and

          [J.] K. "substantial interest" means an ownership interest that is greater than twenty percent."

     SECTION 2. Section 10-16-8 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1967, Chapter 306, Section 8, as amended) is amended to read:

     "10-16-8. CONTRACTS INVOLVING FORMER PUBLIC OFFICERS OR EMPLOYEES--REPRESENTATION OF CLIENTS AFTER GOVERNMENT SERVICE--LOBBYING AFTER GOVERNMENT SERVICE.--

          A. A state agency shall not enter into a contract with, or take any action favorably affecting, any person or business that is:

                (1) represented personally in the matter by a person who has been a public officer or employee of the state within the preceding year if the value of the contract or action is in excess of one thousand dollars ($1,000) and the contract is a direct result of an official act by the public officer or employee; or

                (2) assisted in the transaction by a former public officer or employee of the state whose official act, while in state employment, directly resulted in the agency's making that contract or taking that action.

          B. A former public officer or employee shall not represent a person in [his] the person's dealings with the government on a matter in which the former public officer or employee participated personally and substantially while a public officer or employee.

          C. For a period of one year after leaving government service or employment, a former public officer or employee shall not represent for pay a person before the government agency at which the former public officer or employee served or worked.

          D. For a period of two years after leaving government service or employment, a former public officer or legislator shall not act as a lobbyist, as defined in the Lobbyist Regulation Act."

     SECTION 3. Section 10-16-11 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1967, Chapter 306, Section 11, as amended) is amended to read:

     "10-16-11. CODES OF CONDUCT.--

          A. By January 1, 1994, each elected statewide executive branch public officer shall adopt a general code of conduct for employees subject to [his] the officer's control. The New Mexico legislative council shall adopt a general code of conduct for all legislative branch employees. The general codes of conduct shall be based on the principles set forth in the Governmental Conduct Act.

          B. Within thirty days after the general codes of conduct are adopted, they shall be given to and reviewed with all executive and legislative branch officers and employees. All new public officers and employees of the executive and legislative branches shall review the employees' general code of conduct prior to or at the time of being hired.

          C. The head of every executive and legislative agency and institution of the state may draft a separate code of conduct for all public officers and employees in that agency or institution. The separate agency code of conduct shall prescribe standards, in addition to those set forth in the Governmental Conduct Act and the general codes of conduct for all executive and legislative branch public officers and employees, that are peculiar and appropriate to the function and purpose for which the agency or institution was created or exists. The separate codes, upon approval of the responsible executive branch public officer for executive branch public officers and employees or the New Mexico legislative council for legislative branch employees, govern the conduct of the public officers and employees of that agency or institution and, except for those public officers and employees removable only by impeachment, shall, if violated, constitute cause for dismissal, demotion or suspension. The head of each executive and legislative branch agency shall adopt ongoing education programs to advise public officers and employees about the codes of conduct. All codes shall be filed with the secretary of state and are open to public inspection.

          D. Codes of conduct shall be reviewed at least once every four years. An amended code shall be filed as provided in Subsection C of this section.

          E. All legislators and public officers shall attend a minimum of two hours of ethics continuing education and training biennially."

     SECTION 4. Section 10-16-13.3 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 2007, Chapter 362, Section 11) is amended to read:

     "10-16-13.3. PROHIBITED CONTRIBUTIONS--FINANCIAL SERVICE CONTRACTORS.--

          A. A business that contracts with a state agency to provide financial services involving the investment of public money or issuance of bonds for public projects shall not knowingly contribute anything of value to a public officer or employee of that state agency who has authority over the investment of public money or issuance of bonds, the revenue of which is used for public projects in the state.

          B. A public officer or employee of a state agency that has authority over the investment of public money or issuance of bonds, the revenue of which is used for public projects in the state, shall not knowingly accept a contribution of anything of value from a business that contracts with that state agency to provide financial services involving the investment of public money or issuance of bonds for public projects.

          C. For the purposes of this section:

                (1) "anything of value" means any money, property, service, loan or promise, but does not include food and refreshments with a value of less than one hundred dollars ($100) consumed in a day and not more than two hundred fifty dollars ($250) consumed annually; and

                (2) "contribution" means a donation or transfer to a recipient for the personal use of the recipient, without commensurate consideration."

     SECTION 5. Section 10-16A-1 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1993, Chapter 46, Section 39) is amended to read:

     "10-16A-1. SHORT TITLE--FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE ACT.--[Sections 39 through 45 of this act] Chapter 10, Article 16A NMSA 1978 may be cited as the "Financial Disclosure Act"."

     SECTION 6. Section 10-16A-3 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1993, Chapter 46, Section 41, as amended) is amended to read:

     "10-16A-3. REQUIRED DISCLOSURES FOR CERTAIN CANDIDATES AND PUBLIC OFFICERS AND EMPLOYEES--CONDITION FOR PLACEMENT ON BALLOT OR APPOINTMENT.--

          A. At the time of filing a declaration of candidacy or nominating petition, a candidate for legislative or statewide office shall file with the proper filing officer, as defined in Section 1-8-25 NMSA 1978, a financial disclosure statement on a prescribed form. In addition, each year thereafter during the month of January, a legislator and a person holding a statewide office shall file with the proper filing officer a financial disclosure statement. If the proper filing officer is not the secretary of state, the proper filing officer shall forward a copy of the financial disclosure statement to the secretary of state within seventy-two hours.

          B. A state agency head or official whose appointment to a board or commission is subject to confirmation by the senate shall file with the secretary of state a financial disclosure statement within thirty days of appointment and during the month of January every year thereafter that [he] the state agency head or official holds public office.

          C. The financial disclosure statement shall include for any person identified in Subsection A or B of this section and the person's spouse the following information for the prior calendar year:

                (1) the full name, mailing address and residence address of each person covered in the disclosure statement, except the address of the spouse need not be disclosed; the name and address of the person's and spouse's employer and the title or position held; and a brief description of the nature of the business or occupation;

                (2) all sources of gross income of more than five thousand dollars ($5,000) to each person covered in the disclosure statement, identified by general category descriptions that disclose the nature of the income source, in the following broad categories: law practice or consulting operation or similar business, finance and banking, farming and ranching, medicine and health care, insurance (as a business and not as payment on an insurance claim), oil and gas, transportation, utilities, general stock market holdings, bonds, government, education, manufacturing, real estate, consumer goods sales with a general description of the consumer goods and the category "other", with direction that the income source be similarly described. In describing a law practice, consulting operation or similar business of the person or spouse, the major areas of specialization or income sources shall be described, and if the spouse or a person in the reporting person's or spouse's law firm, consulting operation or similar business is or was during the reporting calendar year or the prior calendar year a registered lobbyist under the Lobbyist Regulation Act, the names and addresses of all clients represented for lobbying purposes during those two years shall be disclosed;

                (3) a general description of the type of real estate owned in New Mexico, other than a personal residence, and the county where it is located;

                (4) all other New Mexico business interests not otherwise listed of ten thousand dollars ($10,000) or more in a New Mexico business or entity, including any position held and a general statement of purpose of the business or entity;

                (5) all memberships held by the reporting individual and [his] the reporting individual's spouse on boards of for-profit businesses in New Mexico;

                (6) all New Mexico professional licenses held;

                (7) each state agency that was sold goods or services in excess of five thousand dollars ($5,000) during the prior calendar year by a person covered in the disclosure statement;

                (8) each state agency, other than a court, before which a person covered in the disclosure statement represented or assisted clients in the course of [his] the person's employment during the prior calendar year; and

                (9) a general category that allows the person filing the disclosure statement to provide whatever other financial interest or additional information the person believes should be noted to describe potential areas of interest that should be disclosed.

          D. A complete financial disclosure statement shall be filed every year. The secretary of state shall mail each elected official required to file a financial disclosure statement a copy of any statement the person filed the previous year.

          E. The financial disclosure statements filed pursuant to this section are public records open to public inspection during regular office hours and shall be retained by the state for five years from the date of filing.

          F. The financial disclosure statements filed pursuant to this section shall be in writing, signed and sworn by the person filing the statement and notarized.

          [F.] G. A person who files a financial disclosure statement may file an amended statement at any time to reflect significant changed circumstances that occurred since the last statement was filed.

          [G. Any] H. A candidate for a legislative or statewide office who fails or refuses to file a financial disclosure statement required by this section before the final date for the withdrawal of candidates provided for in the Election Code shall not have [his] the candidate's name printed on the election ballot.

          [H.] I. For a state agency head or an official whose appointment to a board or commission is subject to confirmation by the senate, the filing of the financial disclosure statement required by this section is a condition of entering upon and continuing in state employment or holding an appointed position."

     SECTION 7. Section 10-16B-1 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 2007, Chapter 226, Section 1) is amended to read:

     "10-16B-1. SHORT TITLE.--[This act] Chapter 10, Article 16B NMSA 1978 may be cited as the "Gift Act".

     SECTION 8. Section 10-16B-3 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 2007, Chapter 226, Section 3) is amended to read:

     "10-16B-3. LIMITATION ON GIFTS.--

          A. A state officer or employee or a candidate for state office, or [that person's] the family of the state officer or employee or the candidate for state office, shall not knowingly accept from a restricted donor, and a restricted donor shall not knowingly donate to a state officer or employee or a candidate for state office, or [that person's] the family of the state officer or employee or the candidate for state office, a gift of [a] an aggregate market value greater than two hundred fifty dollars ($250) in a calendar year.

          B. A lobbyist registered with the secretary of state, the lobbyist's employer or a government contractor shall not donate gifts of an aggregate market value greater than one thousand dollars ($1,000) in a calendar year to any one state officer or employee [or], to any one candidate for state office or to the family of the state officer or employee or the candidate for state office.

          C. A state officer or employee shall not solicit gifts for a charity from a business or corporation regulated

by the state agency for which the state officer or employee works and shall not otherwise solicit donations for a charity in such a manner that it appears that the purpose of the donor in making the gift is to influence the state officer or employee in the performance of an official duty."

     SECTION 9. EFFECTIVE DATE.--The effective date of the provisions of this act is July 1, 2011.

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