Vets aim for cheaper bills

How much would veterans' bills cost?

Patrick Buffkin, a legislative analyst with Nelson Mullins in Raleigh, said the veterans groups he works with are being careful to push for bills that don't have a high price tag.

The three top priorities — studying traumatic brain injury, extending a tax exemption on military pensions and creating a Cabinet-level veterans post — are not expensive, though the exemption would cut some state income tax revenue.

"The Veterans Council sets their agenda not based on just what they want but also what is feasible," he said. "We understand that the state's facing a serious budget crunch. We've looked for ideas that will make a difference in veterans' lives, but also not cost a lot of money."

The other bills being pushed by legislators are also relatively minor, he said.

In recent years, he said the N.C. Veterans Council has gotten funding set aside for two new veterans nursing homes, helped raise the homestead tax exemption for disabled veterans and reserved a position for a veteran on the State Personnel Commission.

The N.C. Military Foundation's lobbying

The N.C. Military Foundation spent $49,000 on lobbying in 2007.

According to state and federal lobbying disclosure forms, the nonprofit started by Lt. Gov. Beverly Perdue to promote defense spending in North Carolina spent about a quarter of its consulting budget on lobbyists in its first full year.

With a tight budget, the group relies heavily on outside consultants, including two lobbyists, Jimmy Broughton and Mark Harkins. Executive Director Will Austin also does some lobbying of state government, and lobbyist John Mashburn also did some work in 2007.

The lobbyists are a bipartisan group.

Broughton is a former chief of staff to Republican Sen. Jesse Helms, Mashburn was general counsel to Republican Sen. Judd Gregg, Harkins was chief of staff to Democratic Rep. Brad Miller, and Austin was an assistant to Democratic Sen. John Edwards.

Broughton, Harkins and Mashburn work for Raleigh firm Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice.

In 2007, the foundation reported spending $9,340 for Broughton and Austin to lobby the state government, and $40,000 for Broughton, Harkins and Mashburn to lobby the federal government.

That year, it spent about $212,000 on outside consultants.

Federal lobbying disclosure forms filed by the N.C. Military Foundation.
Download document
State lobbying disclosure forms filed by the N.C. Military Foundation.
Download document

The N.C. Military Foundation's consultants

Who is consulting for the N.C. Military Foundation?

The nonprofit started by Lt. Gov. Beverly Perdue in 2006 to promote defense spending in North Carolina runs on a tight budget, relying on outside consultants.

Here's a quick sketch of their major consultants:

Retired Major Gen. Mike Davidson: Former assistant to the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff under Gen. Hugh Shelton.

Hon. Mike Walker: Former acting Secretary of the Army in 1998 and Undersecretary of Defense.

Meg Ryan O'Donnell: President of Winning Strategies, a Raleigh communications firm.

Jimmy Broughton: Former chief of staff for U.S. Sen. Jesse Helms and federal lobbyist with Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice.

Mark Harkins: Former chief of staff for U.S. Rep. Brad Miller and lobbyist with Womble Carlyle.

As lobbyists on military issues, Broughton and Harkins also work for Blackwater Worldwide, a controversial security contractor based in Moyock.

Executive Director Will Austin says he met with Blackwater in the past, but the foundation does not typically promote specific military contractors, instead focusing on the state's overall military friendliness.

"We don't have a relationship with them," he said.

Federal tax forms filed by the N.C. Military Foundation in 2007.
Download document

N.C. Military Foundation's tight budget

The N.C. Military Foundation runs on a tight budget.

The nonprofit started by Lt. Gov. Beverly Perdue in 2006 to promote defense spending in North Carolina spent $140,000 less than it received its first year in operation, according to federal tax forms.

Five North Carolina companies — Wachovia, Progress Energy, Duke Energy and Charlotte defense contractors General Dynamics and Parsons Corp. Commercial Technology Group — each pledged $100,000 to fund the group its first year, and it earned another $3,274 in interest on that money.

But during that time it spent only $363,914, including $212,000 for consultants, $72,718 for the salary of executive director Will Austin, $7,055 on travel, $6,111 on conferences, $3,283 for marketing and $1,131 for a Toshiba laptop.

Austin, the organization's sole full-time employee, works out of a small office on Hargett Street in Raleigh. He has a part-time administrative assistant.

He told Dome the board of directors recently authorized him to hire a deputy director, but the nonprofit will continue to use consultants on its various projects.

"We're lean on staff and infrastructure," he said. "We spend our money on consultants."

What has the N.C. Military Foundation done?

What has the N.C. Military Foundation accomplished?

Since Lt. Gov. Beverly Perdue started the nonprofit to promote defense spending in North Carolina in 2006, it has worked on a number of different projects:

Helping Contractors: In November of 2007, it held a summit for 250 construction contractors with Major Gen. Bo Temple of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and Rear Adm. Chris Mossey of the Naval Facilities Atlantic to learn about future base expansions.

Introducing Australians: In December of 2007, it brought two members of the Australian embassy to a luncheon with 70 business leaders in Raleigh to learn about future business opportunities under a pending defense treaty.

Promoting Veterans: In 2008, the foundation worked with the N.C. Military Business Center to create a database for employers considering hiring former military personnel for civilian jobs and explain military job skills.

Executive Director Will Austin said the foundation's method is to educate business and military leaders about ways to make the state more military friendly.

"We're trying to bring people together," he said.

What is the N.C. Military Foundation?

Answer:

A nonprofit founded by Lt. Gov. Beverly Perdue to promote defense spending in North Carolina.

The N.C. Military Foundation incorporated as a tax-exempt 501(c)(6) on Sept. 6, 2006, with a stated mission of "preparing North Carolina businesses to meet the contractual needs of existing U.S. Military facilities" and fostering the "proper public policy environment" to boost military spending here.

It has hosted summits on helping contractors get military construction jobs, introducing Australian diplomats to state business leaders and promoting veterans for civilian jobs.

Five North Carolina companies — Wachovia, Duke Energy, Progress Energy and Charlotte-based defense contractors General Dynamics and Parsons Corp. Commercial Technology Group., each pledged $200,000 in grants to the foundation for two years.

Still, the group works on a tight budget, spending most of its money on outside consultants and lobbyists. It's lone full-time employee is executive director Will Austin, a former executive assistant and foreign policy assistant to U.S. Sen. John Edwards.

The board of directors includes several retired three- and four-star military officers: Army Gens. William F. Kernan and James J. Lindsay, Marine Lt. Gen. Martin R. Berndt, Coast Guard Rear Admiral Paul E. Busick and Air Force Lt. Gen. Robert D. Springer.

It also includes high-level officials from each of the five founding companies.

Brief:
A nonprofit founded by Lt. Gov. Beverly Perdue to promote defense spending in North Carolina.

Perdue's military foundation hosts session

A couple representatives of the Australian Embassy riding herd on a slide show about a trade treaty is the kind of thing that happens several times a day in Washington.

But it was unusual for that to happen in Raleigh, as it did Thursday, Jay Price reports.

The session was a sign of the growing interest among state leaders in luring more military contracts and contractors—and a measure of the clout of the N.C. Military Foundation, which hosted the presentation.

The year-old foundation, a nonprofit group funded by private industry, aims to grab more military contracting for North Carolina.

It is nonpartisan but was based on an idea by Lt. Gov. Beverly Perdue, who oversaw the state's efforts to ensure its military facilities grew rather than shrank in the massive round of base closing and realignment in 2005.

More after the jump.

Syndicate content