State official says accepting gifts, trips from vendors ‘smacks of impropriety’
The stateĢƵ auditor general said that 18 of the stateĢƵ 67 counties reported officials have accepted gifts from voting machine vendors, including a trip to Las Vegas, a wine festival and distillery tour, high end meals and amusement part tickets.
“It doesn’t matter if the gifts or large or small. My problem is that anyone who accepted them, period, could have been swayed by some of those perks,” said Auditor General Eugene DePasquale.
During a Friday press conference, DePasquale said the state legislature should create rules for officials in counties and municipalities similar to those imposed by Gov. Tom Wolf, who prohibits those under his purview from accepting anything – “even a bottle of water,” the auditor general said – for free.
“Even if the gifts have no impact, the mere appearance of it makes it look that way,” he said.
DePasquale had asked officials across the state to answer six questions about whether they accepted or were offered perks from voting machine companies as the counties work toward a Department of State mandate to upgrade voting systems by the end of this year. The new systems must have a paper record to allow for more accurate post-election audits.
Neither Fayette CountyĢƵ commissioners nor Election Bureau Director Larry Blosser accepted gifts or travel, according to the statements sent to the auditor generalĢƵ office.
Responses from Blosser and Commissioners Angela M. Zimmerlink, Dave Lohr and Vincent Vicites said they have only interacted with voting machine vendors at conferences. ZimmerlinkĢƵ response noted only having one interaction with a vendor who was showing equipment.
“As a county elected official I have not accepted gifts of any kind; not served on any advisory boards; not had trips paid for by any voting equipment vendors etc.,” she wrote.
Fayette County Commissioner Dave Lohr said he responded to DePasqualeĢƵ six questions, about receiving gifts and trips from the voting machine companies, and he answered that he did not.
Vicites said he agreed with DePasqualeĢƵ thoughts on setting up rules for county and municipal officials receiving gifts or travel perks.
“I think thatĢƵ a good thing heĢƵ doing,” Vicites said.
Currently, Vicites said, the commissioners are looking at different options for voting machines and are waiting for the state budget to pass to see what percentage of the cost the state will provide for the machines.
“I’m not going to spend county tax dollars until I know how much money we’re getting from the state,” Vicites said, adding that they still have to the end of the year to meet the deadline to purchase the machines so they will be in place by April 2020. “We have to do our due diligence, and we’re doing that right now.”
Like Fayette, officials Greene and Washington counties told DePasquale they neither accepted nor were offered gifts or travel perks by companies.
Washington CountyĢƵ response noted that in 2016, several officials attended a demonstration of equipment where lunch, coffee and donuts were provided by two different vendors. Last year, the same two vendors held separate demonstrations at the county building and provided lunch, according to the countyĢƵ response.
Westmoreland County Director of Elections Beth Lechman, who responded last week to DePasqualeĢƵ request, said one company paid for tickets for her and her husband to attend the Lake Erie Wine Festival in September and for dinner for the couple. She indicated the cost for tickets and dinner totaled about $115. Her response also noted that one company took her and the officeĢƵ deputy director to dinner at Monterey Bay Fish Grotto in 2018, at an estimated cost of $78 per meal.
However, she wrote, “To the best of the countyĢƵ knowledge, there have been no trips offered and/or refused and no county officials have attended seminars or conferences ‘hosted’ by a voting system vendor.”
DePasquale said officials making decisions about who will get their business “should not accept anything of value from companies,” he said, because it “smacks of impropriety.”
Yet, he said, doing so is not illegal.
DePasquale questioned what information relative to the informed purchase of voting equipment was gained by accepting gifts.
“Why did these interactions need to take place over a lobster dinner and a distillery tour?” he asked.
He said he intended refer some counties’ responses to the state Ethics Commission.