Don Benton, R-Vancouver (Senate) –$712.24
Liz Pike, R-Camas (House) — $671.99
Brandon Vick, R-Felida (House) –$634.29
Monica Stonier, D-Vancouver (House) — $605.13
Annette Cleveland, D-Vancouver (Senate) — $462.75
Paul Harris, R-Vancouver (House) — $419.80
Jim Moeller, D-Vancouver (House) –$356.60
Ann Rivers, R-La Center (Senate) — $342.58
Sharon Wylie, D-Vancouver (House) — $285.72
OLYMPIA — Washington ethics law prohibits public officials from accepting free meals on more than “infrequent occasions.” Some state lawmakers, however, let lobbyists pick up the tab several times in a single week.
In the first four months of this year, the state’s 50 most active lobbyists pampered legislators with hundreds upon hundreds of meals, totaling a projected value of more than $65,000, according to a review of thousands of pages of lobbyist filings.
Many of the political officials accepted the meals while at the same time claiming $90 a day in taxpayer-funded per diems that are designed to cover the cost of basic expenses — including meals — while working in Olympia.
Lawmakers have ensured that their lobbyist meetings are nearly impossible to track. Unlike campaign contributions that are reported in electronic format and placed into sortable databases, the state’s registered lobbyists submit their expenditure information on paper documents that are rife with errors, omissions, perplexing cross-references, missing sections and illegible pages. In order to find out who is wining-and-dining representatives, a member of the public would have to review tens of thousands of pages of those problematic records to identify the times that lobbyists reported having meals with public officials.