Source: http://nyccfb.info/law/advisory-opinion-requests/2005-3-ballot-petition-gatherers-also-distributing-campaign-materials-are-not-100-exempt/
Timestamp: 2019-04-25 12:18:14+00:00

Document:
Below are comments from New Yorkers regarding Gifford Miller.
Re: N.Y. Election Law §§ 6-134(4), 6-136(2), 6-138(2), 6-138(4), 6-142(2), 6-154(2), 6-158(1); Administrative Code §§ 3-706, 3-711(2); Campaign Finance Board Rules 1-08(j), (l); Advisory Opinions Nos. 1996-1, 2001-5, 2005-1; Final Board Determinations No. 2003-1, 2003-3; Op. No. 2005-3.
Certain expenditures are exempt from the expenditure limitations, including expenditures incurred "for the purpose of complying with the provisions of the Campaign Finance Act or the election law, including legal fees, accounting fees, the cost of record creation and retention, and other necessary compliance expenditures…". Administrative Code §3-706(4). The burden is always on the candidate to substantiate exempt expenditures. Rule 1-08(l).
As the Board stated in Final Determination No. 2003-3 (September 12, 2003), the expenditure limitations serve the important purpose of "leveling the playing field," and indeed may be the most important factor in overcoming a disparity of resources between serious candidates. Violations of the expenditure limit are particularly harmful: the opponents of a candidate who exceeds the expenditure limit have no recourse to level the playing field, especially when a candidate exceeds the limit in the final days prior to an election. Similarly, while the benefits obtained from other violations of the Program's requirements may be eliminated or cured (such as by refunding an impermissible corporate contribution), the benefits of exceeding the expenditure limit, which can be substantial, may not be undone or otherwise corrected. For this reason, the Board consistently has enforced the expenditure limitations rigorously and construed the exempt expenditure provisions narrowly. See, e.g., Advisory Opinions Nos. 1996-1 (April 4, 1996), 2001-5 (May 17, 2001), 2005-1 (April 29, 2005); Final Determinations Nos. 2003-1 (July 31, 2003), 2003-3 (September 12, 2003); October 18, 1996 Board publication "Exempt Expenditures" ("provisions exempting expenditures from spending limits are narrowly construed…").
Campaigning is itself never an exempt activity – it is an inherently public activity. To the extent that any potentially exempt activities threaten the Act's limits because they are carried out in a public manner, they will be closely scrutinized by the Board. Cf. Advisory Opinion No. 2005-1, issued in April 2005 at the request of the Miller Campaign. When the form of the exempt expenditure has a public impact, as opposed to expenditures on items like attorneys' fees, which have a private impact, it is particularly important that there be a narrow construction of the exempt activity because such public activity could benefit the candidate with useful publicity. Candidates should not seek to engage in campaign activity through their exempt expenditure claims.
The validity of exempt claims only becomes vital to the integrity of the spending limit when a candidate's total spending, including those expenditures claimed as exempt, exceeds the spending limit. In many campaigns this does not happen. But when it does, exempt claims must be scrutinized carefully because if they are not valid, the spending limit will have been exceeded. The Board's consistent practice in thousands of analogous instances, as well as in two cases in which the issue presented here was before the Board, has been to require campaigns to make an allocation between exempt and non-exempt activities performed by the same people.
The Board has a longstanding practice that a campaign making expenditures for goods and/or services that are used both for exempt and non-exempt purposes may claim a portion of the goods and/or services as exempt in proportion to their usage for exempt activities. For example, where the campaign office is used in part for exempt compliance activities and in part for non-exempt activities, that portion of the campaign's expenditures for overhead (e.g., rent, utilities, office equipment, and supplies) which corresponds to the portion of time the office is used for exempt purposes, may be claimed as exempt. The Board has applied this principle to literally thousands of campaigns over the past decade. Guidance regarding how to allocate expenditures for goods and services used for both exempt and non-exempt activities was provided to campaigns as far back as 1996, with the Board's 1996 publication "Exempt Expenditures" and Advisory Opinion No. 1996-1 (April 4, 1996) (in part discussing exempt expenditure allocations for expenditures that have both an exempt and a non-exempt purpose).
The costs of producing campaign literature to be distributed by petition-gatherers may not be claimed as exempt. See the Hevesi matter, discussed below; Final Board Determination No. 2003-3 (September 12, 2003), upheld in Letitia James, et al. v. New York City Campaign Finance Board, N.Y. Sup. Ct. Index No. 100397/04 (May 26, 2004) (Wetzel, J.) (specifically affirming the Board's determination that the James campaign's expenditures for producing palm cards used in the petitioning process were not exempt from the spending limits, and stating that such a result was consistent with the Board's decision in the Hevesi matter).5 Indeed, the Miller Campaign does not claim as exempt the costs of producing the literature distributed by its petition-gatherers.
As a general matter, since the costs of producing literature used in petitioning are not exempt, consistent with the practice of the Board with regard to the allocation of other exempt and non-exempt activities, the corresponding costs of distributing that literature should not simply be assumed to be 100% exempt.
To be included on the ballot as a candidate for mayor in the 2005 Democratic Party primary requires 7,500 signatures on valid designating petitions. N.Y. Election Law §6-136(2)(b). The 7,500 signatures must be valid signatures from enrolled members of the Democratic Party living in New York City. N.Y. Election Law §6-136(2). The first day to sign designating petitions was June 7, 2005. N.Y. Election Law §6-134(4); "Calendar of Dates 2005 & 2006" (Board of Elections in the City of New York). Candidates could file designating petitions from July 11, 2005 to July 14, 2005. N.Y. Election Law §6-158(1); "Calendar of Dates 2005 & 2006" (Board of Elections in the City of New York).
To be included on the 2005 general election ballot by independent nomination, a candidate also needs 7,500 valid petition signatures.9 N.Y. Election Law §6-142(2)(b). Here, however, the signatures can come from any voter registered in New York City, without regard to party. N.Y. Election Law §6-142(2). The first day to sign independent nominating petitions was July 12, 2005. N.Y. Election Law §6-138(4); "Calendar of Dates 2005 & 2006" (Board of Elections in the City of New York). Candidates could file independent nominating petitions from August 16, 2005 to August 23, 2005. N.Y. Election Law §6-154(2); "Calendar of Dates 2005 & 2006" (Board of Elections in the City of New York).
It has been reported that Miller collected approximately 158,000 signatures on his designating petitions, or more than twenty times the number required.11 According to the campaign, however, only 40,000 signatures (or more than 5 times the amount required) were collected by the campaign itself. The others were said to have been collected by groups supportive of Miller's candidacy.12 The Miller Campaign states that it collected 59,000 signatures for the "Smaller Class Size" line, or almost eight times the number required.
The Miller Campaign provides two pieces of literature that were distributed during the petition process. The first is a roughly legal-size, four-color, glossy piece that contains photographs of Miller, introduces his background and campaign philosophy, asks for petition signatures to put him on the Democratic Party primary ballot, and contains the date for the Democratic Party primary in larger print than the request for signatures. The second piece (attached as Exhibit A) is a roughly letter-size, four-color, glossy piece that includes photographs of Miller with school children,13 describes Miller's plan for reducing class size, asks for petition signatures to add a "Smaller Class Size line to the ballot," and contains the date for the Democratic Party primary, again, in larger print (in all capitals and bold face) than the request for signatures.
The Miller Campaign in its request states that "during the interaction with the voter, the carrier distributed the literature, asked the voter whether he/she had a preference14 in the mayoral race, engaged the voter in a conversation regarding putting Gifford Miller on the ballot, and solicited a signature on the ballot petition."15 The Miller Campaign states that voter preference data were used to generate petitioning volunteers and to target petitioning efforts. It states that the information has been "quarantined" since the end of the petitioning process.16 The Campaign further states that "in instances when a voter was not at home, the literature was left at the door, merely as a prelude to a follow-up visit by a carrier seeking that voter's signature on the petition – that same day, if possible, and a future occasion if necessary."
While the law does not set a limit on the total amount a campaign can claim as exempt, there is some point at which petitioning, an inherently public activity (unlike other compliance work, which is primarily a non-public activity) merges with campaigning, another inherently public activity. Cf. Administrative Code §3-706(4), Advisory Opinion No. 2005-1.
At some point, the sheer volume of expenditures can demonstrate a divergence from costs associated with complying with New York State Election Law, which are exempt, and campaigning, which is not. Allowing unlimited exempt claims for "petitioning expenses"19 would potentially create a gaping hole in the principles underlying the Campaign Finance Act. It blinks away the possibility that under all the facts and circumstances, what was labeled petitioning was in reality campaigning. Thus, to make the point by using an extreme example, if an automatic 100% exemption were the rule, a candidate could visit every voter registered in the party and give them a piece of literature extolling the candidate. For example, in the case of the Democratic Party in 2005, this automatic 100% exempt position would have justified leaving literature with the more than 2.5 million people who are active registered Democrats in the City of New York. In such an extreme case, one would have to conclude that while done in the guise of petitioning, the expenditures were in reality campaign expenditures, and thus, while perfectly lawful, could not be exempt.
Avoiding an overly broad construction of exempt petition expenditures is also important because, by definition, an overly liberal construction of exempt petitioning expenditures—particularly those such as the distribution of literature that also, by definition, serve a campaign purpose—favors candidates with more money and thus would undercut the objective of the Act to help to level the playing field among candidates.
To the extent that petition-gatherers were clearly distributing campaign material while they attempted to get signatures both for the Democratic Party primary and for an independent line, the Board will treat these two activities separately.
The Board declines at this time to respond to the Miller request with respect to the Democratic Party petitioning activity in light of allegations by the Weiner and Fields campaigns that activities presented as petitioning by the Miller Campaign in fact should be treated as part of a campaign field operation, which would not be exempt. The Board is treating the Weiner and Fields letters as informal complaints. The Board directs the Miller Campaign to respond in writing to these campaigns' statements by 10:00 a.m., Thursday, September 8. In doing so, the Miller Campaign should treat the allegations as relevant to the rationale for its allocation on the independent nominating petitions, as well as to issues concerning the Democratic Party primary activities.
In the case of the independent nominating petitioning, the Board concludes that this effort appears disproportionate to any petitioning purposes, and the Board cannot accept a 100% exempt allocation for these expenses, for three reasons that illustrate how otherwise exempt expenditures could in reality and upon analysis be campaign activity which is not exempt.
Third, the fact that the literature in question demonstrates its purpose as campaigning, by prominently displaying the date of the Democratic Party primary, which in the context of a petition process for inclusion on the general election ballot, is entirely irrelevant.
In addition to its submission responding to the Weiner and Fields letters, the Board directs the Miller Campaign to submit an allocation, and a rationale for such an allocation, between exempt and non-exempt costs, for its petition-gathering for independent nominating petition signatures by Thursday, September 8, 2005, by 10:00 a.m.
Separate Opinion of Dale C. Christensen, Jr.
1 The request was made by letter from Treasurer Marshall Miller dated September 2, 2005. This Opinion does not address any broader issues relating to petitioning. (See n. 2 below). This Opinion does not evaluate other exempt expenditure claims by the Miller Campaign for petitioning or otherwise.
Attached to this Opinion as Exhibit A is a sample of the literature, provided by the Miller Campaign with its request, that was distributed by petition-gatherers for Miller's Smaller Class Size party. See Conclusion below at pp. 9-10. Also attached is a Separate Opinion of Board member Dale C. Christensen, Jr. (see n. 20, below).
3 Additional expenditure limits are applicable to the calendar years prior to the year of the election. While campaigns that exceed these out-year expenditure limits are not in violation of the expenditure limits, the amount in excess of the out-year expenditure limits is used to reduce the gross spending permissible from January 1, 2005 through the primary election below $5,728,000. Administrative Code §§ 3-706(2), 3-706(2-a), Rule 1-08(j). On August 26, 2005, without benefit of any of the Miller Campaign's documentation of its exempt expenditures, Board staff notified the Miller Campaign that its out-year spending reduced the campaign's effective primary election spending limit to $5,068,798. Final review of exempt expenditure documentation will most likely change this number.
4 Heightening the importance of the expenditure limitations, in the 2005 elections, for the first time, New York City's taxpayers are expending public funds in exchange almost exclusively for compliance by participating candidates with the Program's expenditure limitations, as all candidates for offices covered by the Act in New York City elections are now required to abide by nearly all the Act's contribution limitations and disclosure requirements, whether or not they choose to participate in the Program.
5 The Miller Campaign seeks support from prior campaigns, including the James matter, the 2001 election campaign of Eva Moskowitz, and the 2003 election campaigns of Hiram Monserrate and James Gennaro, in support of its arguments. None of these prior matters is apposite here. With respect to the James matter, the campaign cites a single $75 payment to one campaign worker claimed by the James campaign as having been exempt from the expenditure limits. The documentation submitted in support of this single claim - - worker time sheets - - made no mention of literature distribution, and the Board in the course of its consideration of the James matter did not consider or opine on the single $75 claim. The absence of a statement by the Board regarding this payment provides no guidance for this or any other case. See Final Board Determination No. 2003-3 (September 12, 2003). In Gennaro, as in the James matter, only $1,950 in payments, again to a single petition coordinator, was involved, and the Board in the course of its consideration of the Gennaro matter did not consider or opine on this single petition coordinator. As in James, the absence of a statement by the Board on this matter provided no guidance for this or any other case. Because the Board declared a bonus situation in the 2003 Council District #21 Democratic Party primary, neither the Monserrate campaign nor any other campaign in that race was subject to the expenditure limit, and so this case is irrelevant. Administrative Code §3-706(3). In the 2001 election campaign of Eva Moskowitz, the Board did not have evidence before it that volunteer petition-gatherers also distributed literature. Further, to the extent that the Moskowitz campaign did claim expenditures for literature as exempt, that literature was used solely to solicit the volunteer petition-gatherers themselves.
6 Unlike the Miller Campaign's literature, neither piece distributed by the Hevesi campaign for the petition drive referred to the date of the Democratic Party primary election. See discussion of the Miller Campaign literature in Section C, below, at pp. 7-8.
7 It is important to note that at the time in question the Hevesi campaign had not exceeded the primary expenditure limit, nor has the Board ever found that the Hevesi campaign exceeded the 2001 primary spending limit. The Board allowed the Hevesi campaign's expenditures related to its independent nominating petition drive to be exempt from the spending limit in the absence of any evidence of actual campaigning. The allowance of this exemption brought the Hevesi campaign below the spending limit for the primary election.
8 The Board determined that an allocation of 50% to exempt petition-gathering and 50% to non-exempt literature distribution was appropriate, based on the facts presented. The description of the petitioners' scope of work was "Lit. Distribution and petition-gathering."
11 It has been reported that Fernando Ferrer collected 100,000 signatures, or more than 13 times the required number; C. Virginia Fields collected 60,000 signatures, or eight times the required number; and Anthony Weiner collected 40,000 signatures, or more than five times the required number. No objections were filed against Miller's, Ferrer's, Fields', or Weiner's designating petitions.
12See letter of Laurence Laufer to Frederick A.O. Schwarz, Jr. dated September 5, 2005 at p. 6.
13 These same photographs appear in a subsequent piece of campaign literature mailed to potential Democratic Party primary voters in the past week.
14 This information was entered into a computerized database. The use of computer equipment and a voter database informs the Board's decision about whether the work performed by petition workers is properly 100% exempt. The specific claims to exempt the cost of the equipment are beyond the scope of this Opinion.
15 It seems to be well established that face-to-face contact is the most effective kind of contact, increasing the chance that voters will go to the polls. See, e.g., Alan S. Gerber and Donald P. Green, "The Effects of Canvassing, Telephone Calls, and Direct Mail on Voter Turnout: A Field Experiment", The American Political Science Review, Vol. 94, No. 3 (Sept. 2000), 653-663, p. 661.
16 This Opinion notes the representations made by the Miller Campaign, including the representation made by the campaign that it "quarantined" the information it gathered about voter preference since the end of the petitioning effort. The Weiner letter raises issues about this subject which need to be addressed by the Miller Campaign in its response.
17 Of this amount, approximately $730,000 was paid to individual petition workers and reported in the Campaign's disclosure statements with a purpose code "Wages." (It also includes payments for related employment taxes.) The remaining approximately $280,000 in petition expenditures are (1) payments to a consultant to coordinate the petition drive, (2) payments for an office from which the petition drive was coordinated, (3) payments for equipment including computers for the petition drive, (4) payments for the printing of petition forms, (5) payments to some political clubs for petitioning, and (6) various other payments for supplies and attendant materials for the petition drive.
18 The Miller Campaign has claimed approximately 20% of its total primary expenditures as exempt. (This amount includes claims for compliance work unrelated to petitioning which is outside the scope of this Opinion.) Fernando Ferrer has claimed approximately 4.9% of his primary expenditures as exempt, C. Virginia Fields has claimed 1.3%, and Anthony Weiner has claimed 1.9%. The Act provides a "safe harbor" for exempt expenditure claims under 7.5%, for which the documentation requirements are less rigorous.
19 There is no question that these activities are legal. The only issue before the Board is whether expenditures for these activities are exempt from the spending limit.
20 Board member Dale C. Christensen, Jr., issued a Separate Opinion, attached to this Opinion. This Board Opinion was approved for issuance by three Board members present at the Board's meeting of September 6, 2005: Chairman Frederick A.O. Schwarz, Jr., and Board members Joseph Potasnik and Dale C. Christensen, Jr., to represent the conclusions of a majority of the Board members. The Chair announced that Board member Katheryn C. Patterson, although not present because of a last-minute conflict, supports the conclusions of this Opinion, and that Board member Alan N. Rechtschaffen, also not present, would abstain. As a courtesy to the Board, Board member Christensen voted to issue the Opinion although he does not agree with the Opinion and read into the record his Separate Opinion.

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