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Councilmember Cook-Kallio confirmed that if it was a countywide PAC, viewers would need to <br />go to the County's website, which is only voluntary for candidates to use. FPPC committee <br />identification numbers could also be tracked. She asked staff to choose the software that will <br />enable users to enter information, print the forms, and then the candidate could sign it manually. <br />Mayor Hosterman opened the item to public comment. <br />Joe Ely supported the $1 spending limit, expenditure within 5 days or less, limits on timeframes <br />for expenditures, contribution timeframes of one month after the start of an election and stop at <br />7 days prior to an election, recommended all contributions be reported and made available on <br />the website, asked that reporting periods be as late as possible before the election, said <br />spending should be recorded during the service it is contracted and not during the time the <br />expenditure is paid for, supported the $250 limit, asked changes be effective by the 2008 <br />election, and asked to retain the $25 reporting threshold. He cited state law constraints of <br />independent expenditures, wealthy candidates, asked the Council endorse AB583 and the <br />Clean Money System which would allow voters to choose candidates who they know will be <br />accountable to voters and not to wealthy contributors. <br />Mary Roberts thanked staff for their research into electronic filing, supported option 1, <br />transparency, and expenditure limits. <br />Jack Hovingh suggested candidates also be required to file their income tax return for <br />transparency. <br />Marjorie Muentz asked for transparency of contributions before the election, said <br />Councilmember Thorne was supported by the Chamber of Commerce and was unaware of the <br />amount contributed to his campaign until after the election. She felt the information should be <br />made upfront. <br />John Harvey said a solution will not solve all problems, but will create more transparency and <br />supported a voluntary expenditure pledge. <br />John Carroll supported as much transparency as legally possible, supported the City providing <br />links to other County and State websites and supported a 7 day blackout period so all <br />contributions must be made in advance of the election. <br />Judy Symcox supported electronic filing, transparency, felt the voluntary pledge was wrong <br />unless other candidates were also taking pledges not to receive money from public employee <br />unions and asked for consistency among candidates. <br />Mayor Hosterman closed the public comment period. <br />Councilmember Thorne supported added transparency, more frequent reporting, an ability to <br />respond to last minute "hit" pieces or other campaign materials, and a mechanism that allows <br />for fundraising and paying for expenses incurred in the last 7 days of an election in order to <br />respond to a hit piece. <br />Councilmember McGovern agreed there was, and would be, future negative campaigning in the <br />community, agreed with setting a 7 day limit, said there were many people who still go to the <br />polls and supported a limit on the amount of money raised or spent except where a candidate <br />had to respond to a hit piece. <br />City Council Minutes 6 December 18, 2007 <br />