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The N.C. Institute for Constitutional Law will consider redistricting.
The think tank will examine the constitutional and practical implications of Congressional redistricting at a May 7 program.
Former Supreme Court Justice Bob Orr and N.C. Coalition for Lobbying and Government Reform director Jane Pinsky will use the program to advocate for a nonpartisan independent redistricting commission.
A panel will include legislative drafting director Gerry Cohen, Southern Coalition for Social Justice director Anita Earls, UNC-Chapel Hill law professor Robert Joyce, Common Cause director Bob Phillips, and attorneys Thomas Farr and Carl Thurman III.
Recent decisions by the North Carolina and U.S. supreme courts have thrown some kinks in redistricting plans.
"A truly independent redistricting commission may be just the answer to provide constitutional districts for the future," said Orr in a statement.
The program will be held from 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Raleigh Country Club.
Common Cause will honor two legislators and a cartoonist Saturday.
The North Carolina chapter of the nonpartisan advocacy group will recognize House Minority Leader Paul Stam and Democratic Rep. Rick Glazier for their work on ethics laws and N&O editorial cartoonist Dwane Powell for his work from noon to 2 p.m.
The event will be held at the N.C. State Faculty Club in Raleigh.
Powell, who has drawn for the News & Observer for decades, will be the keynote speaker.
The event costs $15 per person or $25 for a couple. Reservations must be made by the end of the day today at this Web site or by calling 919-836-0027.
Pat McCrory turned down a bottled water today.
Speaking at a gubernatorial forum sponsored by the N.C. Coalition for Lobbying and Government Reform, the Republican gubernatorial candidate said that he could not accept a bottle of water from the group because it has a lobbyist.
Under General Statute 163-278.13C, lobbyists cannot make contributions to political candidates.
"The bad news is I'm not allowed to eat here, or even have a drink of water according to the current legislation, and the last place I want to break the rules is at a seminar on ethics," he said.
McCrory argued that the rule, which was passed as a package of ethics reforms after the Jim Black scandal, was unnecessarily strict and focused on the wrong part of the problem.
As it turned out, McCrory was mistaken. Since legislators had been invited and the meeting was open to the public, it fell under the exemption for educational meetings in G.S. 138a-32(e)(3).
Bob Phillips, head of the N.C. chapter of Common Cause, said that he had given McCrory bad information when he arrived, and the candidate ended up eating a sandwich and having a Coke after the meeting.
Still, coalition director Jane Pinsky said she would be open to amending the law to allow gifts of less than $10, as long as it was reported promptly.
"If I buy him a cup of coffee, there's no reason I couldn't go back to my office, get on the computer and report it," she said.
Correction: It was a bottle of water, not a can of Coke as reported earlier.
Beverly Perdue wants to set up an endowment for gubernatorial campaigns.
The Democratic gubernatorial candidate proposed creating the Endowment for Positive Gubernatorial Campaigns — a $50 million trust fund that would pay for campaigns that avoid negative ads, address "major issues" and agree to a series of debates.
"The people of North Carolina, like the rest of the nation, are losing trust in the political system," she said in a statement. "The perception of corruption and a 'pay to play' environment has led to the belief that ordinary citizens do not have as much influence in politics as the rich and powerful."
The proposal is based on former state Sen. Wib Gulley's 1995 bill, which was praised by Common Cause and the League of Women Voters, and a similar endowment for Congressional campaigns proposed by U.S. Sen. Russ Feingold and Vice President Al Gore.
A bipartisan board of 12 individuals appointed by legislative leaders would run the endowment, select the major issues and determine if candidates had qualified with signatures and small donations.
Participating campaigns would not be allowed to use personal wealth or spend additional money on advertising.
U.S. Rep. Walter Jones would seem an odd choice to be the keynote speaker to a Common Cause North Carolina luncheon this week.
The Farmville Republican, a longtime favorite of the Christian right, was chosen, in part, because he has a long history of pushing for lobbying and ethics reform, dating back to his days as a Democratic state legislator in Raleigh, according to Bob Phillips, executive director of the state Common Cause, Rob Christensen reports.
Common Cause will honor Kim Westbrook Strach, the lead investigator for the State Board of Elections for her role in uncovering the Jim Black scandals.
Also getting a nod will be Republican state Rep. George Cleveland of Onslow and Democratic Rep. Pricey Harrison of Greensboro—this week's ideological odd couple. They will receive the Plott Hound award for sponsoring a bill that would have ended in-state tuition benefits for out-of-state athletes.
The event will be held Saturday, Nov. 17, at noon at the N.C. State University Club in Raleigh.
Business picked up the tab for a meeting of alcohol officials.
LB&B Associates, which manages the state Alcoholic Beverage Control board warehouse, and Penn National Insurance, which insures local ABC boards, helped pay for a three-day conference at the posh Grove Park Inn in Asheville.
The benefits to local alcohol board members included free premium drinks, subsidized golf games and tournament prizes.
Bob Phillips, head of Common Cause North Carolina, said the conference was a classic example of why public officials shouldn't accept gifts from people they do business with.
But at least one board members said he would make decisions based on what sells, not what they drank at a mountain resort. (Char-O)
House legislation that did some minor tinkering to the state ethics law appears to be the Senate's vehicle for a major makeover.
Anew version of the bill would open up ethics hearings to the public, a major change that open government groups said needed to be done to dispel fears that violations could be dismissed without the public's knowledge, reports Dan Kane.
The ethics law that passed last year -- which includes tougher penalties on those who lie or mislead about their financial interests -- had closed up those hearings.
The amended bill was introduced Monday at the Senate Select Committee on Government and Election Reform. It says that the Legislative Ethics Committee and the State Ethics Commission shall hold open hearings on ethics law violations, though complaints would remain secret until an investigation determined probable cause.
Read more after the jump.
Revelations about a scholarships given by the N.C. Legislative Black Caucus Foundation have raised new questions about campaign finance. In this podcast, Bob Phillips, executive director of the state chapter of Common Cause, talks about why lobbyists sometimes give to the local fire station and how little is known about the donations.