Common Cause Georgia
Common Cause Georgia is a non-profit, non-partisan, good government advocacy group. We work to strengthen public participation and to ensure that the political process serves the public interest, rather than the special interests.
Our purpose is clear: make public officials and public institutions accountable and responsive to Georgia's citizens.
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Leading Issues in Georgia
January 28, 2009
Lobbyist doled out more than $1.5 million in meals, trips, sports tickets and other gifts to Georgia Lawmakers in 2008 - Highlighting Georgia's need for Lobbying reform.
On Sunday, the AJC published a list of Top Ten recipients of Lobbying gifts in 2008. The article, The General Assembly’s most-gifted members identify's the top recipient as Senate Majority Leader Chip Rogers of Woodstock, with many other Republican leaders not far behind.
Our analyst of reports from the Ethics Commission show Sen. Rogers receiving benefits from lobbyist ranging in value from $904 in lodging from Apple Inc. to a $1.67 meal from the Georgia Association of Realtors. For the full calendar year of 2008 Senator Roger's gifts from various lobbyist equaled $15,709. Gifts to Senator Rogers are just an example of the large flow of money that goes into a pay-for-access system at the state capitol.
Georgia places no limits on what a lobbyist can give a candidate or office holder. To curb the influence of the special interest spending spree each year, Common Cause has been fighting for Lobbying Reform with limits on gifts to lawmakers. In 2005 Governor Perdue proposed a $25 limit in his ethics reform package, but the General Assembly removed that provision. We are working with the general assembly to pass legislation in 2009 to finally put lobbyist gift limits into Georgia law.
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January 16, 2009
Why pursue judicial election reform in Georgia now?
Wasn't there just a smooth election conducted for the Georgia Court of Appeals?
Our answer: Why should reform wait until our judicial system is again threatened upon the campaign auction block? In fact, it's a time of great significance for judicial election reform.
For starters, Common Cause recently contributed to, and signed onto, an amicus brief for a judicial election reform case that is now before the United States Supreme Court. This case was so dramatic that John Grisham fictionalized it into "The Appeal". Click here to read more.
Also, Common Cause recently testified before the Georgia House of Representative's Study Committee on Judicial Election Reform. The Study Committee's final recommendations to the House of Representatives included reforms that addressed the core of Common Cause's concerns. Click here to read the full story.
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by Bill Bozarth, Executive Director Common Cause GeorgiaDecember 15, 2008
Homeowners pay for high-end tax breaks, Buckhead Reporter, December 12th
December 12, 2008
Recent news stories about slowdowns in commercial development in Buckhead and elsewhere brought some interesting facts to light. High-end projects such as the Mansion on Peachtree and the InterContinental Hotel Buckhead are getting help from a Fulton County agency to ease them through the hard times.
In an article in the Nov. 30 Atlanta Journal-Constitution, reporter Kevin Duffy describes how developers work through the Development Authority of Fulton County to arrange bond financing for their projects.
The developer of the St. Regis Hotel was quoted as saying the project would have been difficult to pull off without Development Authority help. What few people realize is that "Development Authority help" essentially equals taxpayer subsidy. We have the equivalent of our own local bailout going on here in Atlanta for the real estate and construction industry.
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