The purpose of this chapter is to avoid corruption and the appearance
of corruption by ensuring that the financial strength of individuals
or organizations does not permit them to exercise a disproportionate
or controlling influence on the election of Santa Rosa City Council
candidates. To achieve such purpose, this chapter is designed to reduce
the influence of large contributions, to ensure that individuals and
interest groups continue to have a fair and equal opportunity to participate
in electing City Council candidates, and to maintain public trust
in governmental institutions and the electoral process. This chapter
is further intended to increase the availability of public information
regarding campaign contributions and expenditures in City elections.
(Ord. 4027 § 1, 2014)
This chapter is intended to supplement the Political Reform Act of 1974 (California Government Code Sections 81000 et seq.). Unless a word or term is specifically defined in this chapter, or the contrary is stated or clearly appears from the context, words and terms used herein shall have the same meaning as defined or used in Title 9 of the California Government Code, in which the Political Reform Act of 1974 is codified, and as supplemented by the Regulations of the Fair Political Practices Commission as set forth in Title 2, Division 6 of the California Code of Regulation, as the same may be, from time to time, amended.
(Ord. 4027 § 1, 2014)
The following definitions shall be used for the purposes of
interpreting the provisions of this chapter:
For purposes of this chapter, "campaign communication" means
any of the following items:
Two hundred or more substantially similar pieces of campaign
literature distributed within a 30-day period, including, but not
limited to, mailers, flyers, facsimiles, pamphlets, door hangers,
e-mails, campaign buttons 10 inches in diameter or larger, and bumper
stickers 60 square inches or larger.
Two hundred or more substantially similar posters, yard or street
signs, and similar items.
Television, cable, satellite and radio broadcasts.
Paid advertisements, including, but not limited to, advertisements
in newspapers, magazines, and on the Internet, and on billboards.
For purposes of this chapter, "campaign communication" does
not include: small promotional items such as pens, pencils, clothing,
mugs, potholders, skywriting or other items on which the statement
required by this section cannot be reasonably printed or displayed
in an easily legible typeface; communications paid for by a newspaper,
radio station, television station or other recognized news medium
on its own behalf; and communications from an organization to its
members other than a communication from a political party to its members.
|
means the Council of the City of Santa Rosa.
means any person who is a candidate for City Council for
the City of Santa Rosa including incumbent Council members, appointed
or elected, whether or not a candidate for reelection.
means any general election, special election or recall election.
means the applicable period as set forth in Section 10-32.120 of this chapter. The intent is to limit each donor to $500.00 per candidate per election.
means a person who was a candidate for City Council at any
City election and who has campaign debt remaining from such election
after expiration of the election cycle for the office of which he
or she was a candidate.
means an expenditure made by any person or committee in connection
with a campaign communication which expressly advocates the election
or defeat of a clearly identified candidate or the qualification,
passage or defeat of a clearly identified measure, or taken as a whole
and in context, unambiguously urges a particular result in an election
but which is not made to or at the behest of the affected candidate
or committee.
means any contribution, including a loan, which totals in
the aggregate $100.00 or more that is made to or received by a candidate,
a controlled committee, or a committee formed or existing primarily
to support or oppose a candidate or measure within 16 days before
the date of the election at which the candidate or measure is to be
voted on.
means any person or combination of persons who support or
oppose a City Council candidate or City ballot measure who have not
filed a campaign disclosure statement or report as required by the
Political Reform Act prior to the sixteenth day before an election.
"Late formed committee" includes all persons and combinations of persons
who come within the definition set forth in Government Code Section
82013 and in addition includes all persons or combinations of persons
who have solicited contributions of $500.00 or more, have received
contributions of $500.00 or more, or have made any expenditures of
$500.00 or more for the purpose of supporting or opposing a City Council
candidate or City ballot measure.
means an independent expenditure that totals in the aggregate
$500.00 or more and is made for or against a specific City Council
candidate or City ballot measure within 90 days before the date of
the election for such candidate or ballot measure.
means an individual, proprietorship, firm, partnership, joint
venture, syndicate, business trust, company, corporation, limited
liability company, association, committee, and any other organization
or group of persons acting in concert.
means any single recorded telephone message made in support
of or opposition to a City Council candidate(s) or City ballot measure(s)
and placed to 200 or more individuals or households within a 30-day
period.
Except as specifically defined in this section, all words used in this chapter have the same definition as that set forth in Title 9 of the California Government Code, in which the Political Reform Act of 1974 is codified, and as supplemented by the Regulations of the Fair Political Practices Commission as set forth in Title 2, Division 6 of the California Code of Regulation, as the same may be, from time to time, amended.
(Ord. 4027 § 1, 2014)
The requirements of this chapter shall apply only to elections
for City Council of the City of Santa Rosa and ballot measures which
are being voted on only within the City of Santa Rosa.
(Ord. 4027 § 1, 2014)
The requirements of this chapter are in addition to all requirements
imposed by State law, including, but not limited to, the California
Political Reform Act, Government Code Section 81000 et seq.
(Ord. 4027 § 1, 2014)
(A)Â
Except as set forth in subsections (E) and (F), every City Council candidate, committee, or other person required to file a campaign statement, report, or other document with the City Clerk that has received contributions or made expenditures of $1,000.00 or more in connection with a City election shall electronically file that campaign disclosure statement, report, or other document according to procedures established by the City Clerk.
(B)Â
Any City Council candidate, committee, or other person not required to electronically file with the City Clerk pursuant to subsection (A) may do so voluntarily.
(C)Â
A City Council candidate, committee, or other person that has electronically
filed a campaign statement or report using the City Clerk's electronic
filing system is not required to file a paper copy of that campaign
statement or report with the City Clerk.
(D)Â
A City Council candidate, committee, or other person required by
California law to file: (1) an original campaign statement, report,
or other document with the Secretary of State or another elections
official; and (2) a copy of that statement with the City Clerk may
elect to file the copy with the City Clerk either in paper format
or by using the City Clerk's electronic filing system.
(E)Â
If the City Clerk's electronic filing system is not capable of accepting
a particular type of campaign statement, report, or other document,
that campaign statement, report, or other document shall be filed
in paper format with the City Clerk.
(F)Â
Once a committee is subject to the electronic filing requirements
imposed by this section, the committee shall remain subject to the
electronic filing requirements, regardless of the amount of contributions
received or expenditures made during each reporting period, until
the committee terminates pursuant to this chapter and the Political
Reform Act.
(G)Â
This section shall become effective July 1, 2014.
(Ord. 4027 § 1, 2014)
Each City Council candidate and each committee formed or existing primarily to support or oppose a City Council candidate or City ballot measure shall file a pre-election campaign disclosure statement for the period from the end of the period covered by the second pre-election statement required by the Political Reform Act to 11:59 p.m. on the third business day immediately preceding election day. Such statement shall be filed with the City Clerk pursuant to Section 10-32.060 by noon on the second business day before the City election.
(Ord. 4027 § 1, 2014)
(A)Â
Each City Council candidate or committee that makes or receives a
late municipal contribution shall report the late municipal contribution.
The City Council candidate or committee that makes the late municipal
contribution shall report his, her, or its full name and street address
and the full name and street address of the person to whom the late
municipal contribution has been made, the office sought if the recipient
is a City Council candidate, or the ballot measure number or letter
if the recipient is a committee primarily formed to support or oppose
a City ballot measure, and the date and amount of the late contribution.
The recipient of the late municipal contribution shall report his,
her, or its full name and street address, and the date and amount
of the late municipal contribution. The recipient shall also report
the full name of the contributor, his, her, or its street address,
and, if applicable, his or her occupation, and the name of his or
her employer, or if self-employed, the name of the business.
(B)Â
A late municipal contribution shall be reported to the City Clerk pursuant to Section 10-32.060 within 24 hours of the time the contribution is made in the case of the candidate or committee that makes the late municipal contribution and within 24 hours of the time it is received in the case of the recipient. A local late municipal contribution shall be reported on subsequent campaign statements without regard to reports filed pursuant to this section.
(C)Â
A late municipal contribution need not be reported pursuant to this
section nor shall it be deemed accepted if it is not cashed, negotiated,
or deposited and is returned to the contributor within 24 hours of
its receipt.
(D)Â
A report filed pursuant to this section shall be in addition to any
other campaign statement required to be filed.
(Ord. 4027 § 1, 2014)
(A)Â
Each late formed committee which prior to an election expends funds
in the amount of $500.00 or more, agrees, either orally or in writing,
to expend funds in the amount of $500.00 or more, or receives goods
or services valued in the amount of $500.00 or more in support of
or in opposition to a City Council candidate or City ballot measure
shall report each expenditure, agreement to make an expenditure, or
receipt of goods and services.
(1)Â
Such report shall be made on FPPC Form 496 (Late Independent Expenditure Report) and filed with the City Clerk pursuant to Section 10-32.060 within 24 hours of the time the expenditure is made or agreed to be made or the goods or services are received. An expenditure or agreement to make an expenditure or receipt of goods or services shall be reported in subsequent campaign statements without regard to reports filed pursuant to this section.
(Ord. 4027 § 1, 2014)
(A)Â
City Council Candidates. Except as provided in subsection (B) of this section, no person shall make, and no City Council candidate or treasurer of any controlled committee of any City Council candidate shall solicit or accept, any contributions which would cause the total amount contributed by such person to such candidate or to his or her controlled committee, to exceed $500.00 during any election cycle. Contributions accepted for campaign expenses and for officeholder expenses shall be aggregated for purposes of the limitation set forth in this section.
(B)Â
Elective Council Members and Candidates with Outstanding Debt from
Prior Election. No person shall make, and no City Council member or
indebted former candidate, or treasurer of any controlled committee
of any City Council member or indebted former candidate, shall solicit
or accept, any contributions for the purpose of retiring outstanding
debt from a prior City election which would cause the total amount
contributed by such person to such City Council member or indebted
former candidate or to his or her controlled committee, to exceed
$500.00 for the election in which the outstanding debt was incurred,
regardless of when the contribution(s) is made or received.
(C)Â
Recall Elections. The contribution limitations set forth in subsection (A) above shall also apply to any committee which collects contributions for the purpose of making expenditures in support of or opposition to the recall of a City Council member, and to contributions received by such City Council member, during a recall election cycle as defined in Section 10-32.120.
(D)Â
Candidate's Personal Funds. The provisions of this section shall not apply to a City Council candidate's contribution of his or her personal funds to his or her own controlled committee. Contributions by the spouse of a City Council candidate from such spouse's separate property shall be subject to the contribution limitations set forth in subsection (A).
(Ord. 4027 § 1, 2014)
(A)Â
Any City Council member or indebted former candidate, or any controlled
committee of any such officer or candidate, accepting any contribution(s)
for the purpose of retiring outstanding debt from a prior City election
and required by State law to report such contributions on the appropriate
schedule(s) of Fair Political Practices Commission Form 460, or any
successor form thereto, shall, at the time required for the reporting
of such contributions on Schedule A and in addition to any other reporting
requirements under State law, clearly designate on said schedule(s)
which contributions were received for the purpose of retiring outstanding
debt and for which prior City election such contributions were received.
(B)Â
Any contribution accepted for the purpose of retiring outstanding
debt from a prior City election shall be applied to reduce or retire
said outstanding debt in the same reporting period in which such contribution
was accepted. The application of any contribution to retire outstanding
debt from a prior City election (i.e., repayment of outstanding loans
and payment of accrued expenses) shall be itemized and identified
on the appropriate schedules and on the summary page of Fair Political
Practices Commission Form 460, or any successor form thereto.
(C)Â
If a City Council member or indebted former candidate, or a controlled committee of any such officer or candidate, receives contributions for the purpose of retiring outstanding debt from a prior City election and the amount of the contributions exceeds the amount of the debt, the excess funds may be used for any other campaign or officeholder expense and shall not be subject to the aggregation requirements set forth in Section 10-32.130 in the election cycle in which the excess funds are expended.
(Ord. 4027 § 1, 2014)
(A)Â
General Elections. The intent of this section is to limit each campaign
donor to $500.00 for any City Council candidate at any election. For
purposes of any general election for City Council, "election cycle"
as used in this chapter means a period beginning three calendar years
preceding the year of the election for which a candidate designates
he or she is filing and ending on December 31st of the year of the
election.
(B)Â
Special Elections. For purposes of any special election for any City
office, the term election cycle as used this chapter shall mean the
period commencing on the date a special election is called by the
City Council and ending on the thirtieth day following said special
election.
(C)Â
Recall Elections. For purposes of any recall election of any City
Council member, the term election cycle as used in this chapter shall
mean the period commencing on either the date a committee is formed
pursuant to the Political Reform Act in support of a recall election
or the date the City Clerk approves a recall petition for circulation
and gathering of signatures, whichever occurs earlier, and ending
on the thirtieth day following the first to occur of any of the following:
(1)Â
The time provided by law for the gathering of signatures on recall
petitions expires without sufficient recall petition signatures having
been filed with the City Clerk to require a recall election;
(2)Â
All committees formed in support of the recall have been terminated
pursuant to the provisions of the Political Reform Act;
(3)Â
The date the recall election is held.
(Ord. 4027 § 1, 2014)
For purposes of the contribution limitations contained in this
chapter, the following provisions shall apply:
(A)Â
All contributions made by a sponsored committee to a City Council
candidate (or to a committee controlled by such candidate) shall be
combined with those contributions made during the same election cycle
by the sponsor(s) of the committee. Consistent with the definition
and use of the terms "sponsored committee" and "sponsor" in the Political
Reform Act, the term "sponsor" shall not include individuals.
(B)Â
Contributions received from the following combinations of individuals
and entities must be aggregated to determine the cumulative amount
of contributions received from a contributor:
(1)Â
Contributions from an individual who makes contributions from personal
funds and who also has sole authority to direct and control contributions
made from other funds;
(2)Â
Contributions from business entities in a parent-subsidiary relationship
and business entities with the same controlling owner (more than 50
percent), unless the entities act completely independently in their
decisions to make contributions;
(3)Â
Contributions from any number of entities or committees if the same
person or a majority of the same persons in fact directs and controls
the contributions each entity makes. This subdivision shall not apply
to treasurers of committees if these treasurers do not participate
in or control in any way a decision on whether the candidate or candidates
received contributions.
(C)Â
Contributions by a married person shall be treated as the separate
contributions of such person and shall not be aggregated with any
contributions of the spouse of such person.
(D)Â
Contributions by children under 18 years of age shall be treated
as contributions by their parent(s) or legal guardian(s), one-half
to each parent or guardian unless only one parent or guardian has
legal custody of such child in which event any such contributions
shall be attributed solely to the custodial parent.
(Ord. 4027 § 1, 2014)
(A)Â
A loan shall be considered a contribution from the maker and the
guarantor of the loan and shall be subject to the contribution limitations
of this chapter.
(B)Â
The proceeds of a loan made to a City Council candidate by a commercial
lending institution in the regular course of business on the same
terms available to members of the public shall not be subject to the
contribution limitations of this chapter if the loan is made directly
to the candidate. The guarantors of such a loan shall remain subject
to the contribution limits of this chapter.
(C)Â
Extensions of credit (other than loans pursuant to subsection (B)) for a period of more than 45 days are subject to the contribution limitations of this chapter.
(D)Â
This section shall apply only to loans and extensions of credit used or intended for use for campaign purposes or which are otherwise connected with the holding of public office and shall not apply to a candidate's personal funds as set forth in Section 10-32.100(D).
(Ord. 4027 § 1, 2014)
(A)Â
A City Council candidate shall have no more than one controlled committee
per office per election and such controlled committee shall have only
one bank account out of which all qualified campaign and officeholder
expenses related to that office shall be made.
(B)Â
This section does not prevent a City Council candidate or a City
Council member from establishing another controlled committee solely
for the purpose of running for a State, Federal, County or other elective
office, or for opposing his or her recall.
(Ord. 4027 § 1, 2014)
If the name, street address, occupation or employer of an individual
contributor (or if such individual is self-employed, the name of the
business, if any, under which the individual is operating) is not
on file in the records of the recipient of the contribution by the
end of the reporting period in which the contribution was accepted,
the contribution shall then be returned to the individual, or paid
to the City's general fund, by the end of that reporting period. Notwithstanding
the above, if a contribution does not designate the requisite information,
the candidate or the candidate's committee may hold the contribution
without returning it or depositing it into a campaign account for
a period of up to 14 days while the requisite information is obtained.
The required information shall be reported on the appropriate schedule(s)
of Fair Political Practices Commission Form 460, or any successor
form thereto. Both the receipt and return of any such contribution
shall be disclosed on the appropriate schedules of Fair Political
Practices Commission Form 460, or any successor form thereto.
(Ord. 4027 § 1, 2014)
Contributions received from any contributor during a reporting period which have a cumulative total of $100.00 or more when added to all other contributions received from such contributor during the same election cycle shall be itemized and reported, both as to individual contribution amounts received during the reporting period and the total cumulative amount received during the election cycle. Such amounts shall be reported on the appropriate schedule(s) of Fair Political Practices Commission Form 460, or any successor form thereto, if the candidate or controlled committee is required to use such form, or shall be reported on a separate schedule appended to the required campaign statement. The term election cycle as used in this section shall mean the period described in Section 10-32.120.
(Ord. 4027 § 1, 2014)
Any person or committee that makes a late independent expenditure, as defined in Section 10-32.030, shall report the late independent expenditure within 24 hours of the time it is made. Such report shall be filed with the City Clerk pursuant to Section 10-32.060 on FPPC Form 496 or any successor form thereto. The notice shall specifically state the ballot measure(s) or name(s) of the candidate(s) whom the independent expenditure is intended to support or oppose. The report shall also include the information required to be provided in FPPC Form 496 or any successor form thereto and the email address, if any, of the person or committee making the independent expenditure. A report filed pursuant to this section shall be in addition to any other campaign statement required to be filed by this chapter or the Political Reform Act.
(Ord. 4027 § 1, 2014)
(A)Â
Any person or committee making an independent expenditure of $500.00 or more shall include in any campaign communication produced by the expenditure, the words "Paid for by" followed by the full name, street address, and phone number of the person or committee making the independent expenditure and the name of at least one principal officer if made by a committee. Any campaign communication supporting or opposing a City Council candidate that is paid for by an independent expenditure must include a statement that it was not authorized by a candidate or a committee controlled by a candidate. Such disclaimers shall be printed in 12-point type or larger in any printed campaign communication, and prominently displayed or presented in a clear and conspicuous manner in any non-printed campaign communication, including, but not limited to, television ads, radio ads, Internet ads, and live telephone calls. The additional disclaimer requirements required by this section do not apply to robocalls as defined in Section 10-32.030.
(B)Â
Disclosure of Major Contributors. Any mailing financially supported
by an independent expenditure shall indicate on the envelope containing
the mailing, and on the mailing itself, the name of the committee
making the independent expenditure, and the names of the top three
financial contributors to the committee at the time the mailing is
being prepared. This required disclaimer shall be in substantially
the following form: "This information is paid for by [Name of Committee]
whose top three funders are [names of top three contributors]."
(Ord. 4027 § 1, 2014)
(A)Â
Robocall Disclaimers. Any person or committee that authorizes or
makes an independent expenditure in any amount for a robocall shall
include in the robocall message the words "Paid for by" followed by
the full name and telephone number of the person or committee authorizing
or paying for the robocall. Any robocall supporting or opposing a
City Council candidate that is paid for by an independent expenditure
must include a statement that it was not authorized by a candidate
or a committee controlled by a candidate. Such disclaimers shall be
audible and played at the same volume and speed as the rest of the
recorded telephone message.
(B)Â
Robocall Disclosure. Any person or committee that authorizes or makes
an independent expenditure in any amount for a robocall shall report
such independent expenditure by filing with the City Clerk a completed
48-hour Robocall Independent Expenditure Report on a form prepared
by the City Clerk for such purpose, to which is attached a transcript
of the robocall message and a record of the number of calls placed
for each message. Such report shall be filed with the City Clerk by
personal delivery, guaranteed overnight mail, fax or email within
48 hours after the robocall has been made. The report shall include
the name, address, telephone number, and email address, if any, of
the person or committee making the independent expenditure and the
ballot measure(s) or name(s) of the candidate(s) whom the robocall
message is intended to support or oppose. The report shall also include
the information required to be provided in FPPC Form 496 or any successor
form thereto. A report filed pursuant to this section shall be in
addition to any other campaign statement required to be filed by this
chapter or the Political Reform Act.
(Ord. 4027 § 1, 2014)
(A)Â
Opt-Out Mechanism Requirement. Any person, candidate, or committee
that authorizes or makes payment for one or more robocalls in a calendar
year in support of or opposition to a City Council candidate(s) or
City ballot measure(s) shall require the person, candidate, committee,
or vendor making the initial robocall to provide an automated, interactive
voice- and/or key press-activated opt-out mechanism for the called
person to make a do-not-call request for additional substantially
similar calls made during the same calendar year. When the called
person elects to opt out using such mechanism, the mechanism must
automatically record the called person's number to the caller's do-not-call
list and immediately terminate the call. When the recorded voice telephone
message is left on an answering machine or a voice mail service, such
message must also provide a telephone number or other means of contact
such that the called person is able to opt out of receiving additional
substantially similar robocalls during the same calendar year.
(B)Â
Accurate Caller Identification Information Requirement. Any person,
candidate, or committee that authorizes or makes payment for a robocall
shall be prohibited from allowing the person, candidate, committee
or vendor who places the robocall to knowingly transmit misleading
or inaccurate caller identification information such that the person
called is unable to contact the caller or the caller's representative
via the number displayed.
(Ord. 4027 § 1, 2014)
(A)Â
No Criminal Penalties. Notwithstanding any other provision of the
Santa Rosa City Code, any violation of any provision of this chapter
shall be enforceable solely as provided in this section.
(B)Â
Civil Liability. Any person who fails to comply with any provision
or requirement of this chapter shall be strictly liable to the City
of Santa Rosa in a sum not to exceed the following amount for each
such violation:
(1)Â
For the making or accepting of any contribution in excess of the
applicable contribution limits specified in this chapter, a sum equal
to three times the amount by which the contribution exceeds the applicable
contribution limit, or the sum of $2,500.00, whichever is greater,
for each violation.
(2)Â
For failing to include on any campaign mailer the disclaimers required by Section 10-32.190, the sum of $5,000.00 for each mass mailing of said non-compliant campaign mailer.
(3)Â
For any other violation of this chapter, the sum of $1,000.00 for
each violation.
(C)Â
Right to Cure Unknowing Violation. In the event a candidate accepts
a contribution and then becomes aware it is in violation of the contribution
limit, that violation by the candidate may be excused if the candidate
returns the contribution or contributes it to the City general fund
within 14 days of becoming aware of the violation.
In the event a person or committee fails to comply with local robocall regulations as set forth in Section 10-32.210 and the person or committee has not received prior notification from the City Clerk regarding said requirements, that violation by the person or committee may be excused at the discretion of the City Clerk if the person or committee within two business days of receipt of notification from the City Clerk provides proof that it has notified its robocall provider to comply with said requirements.
(D)Â
Debt Owing to City. Any amount due from any person pursuant to subsection (B) above shall be a debt due and owing upon demand to the general fund of the City of Santa Rosa.
(E)Â
Civil Action to Collect Debt and Obtain Other Relief. The District
Attorney of the County of Sonoma shall file and prosecute a civil
action in superior court, to recover any amount(s) due and owing to
the City of Santa Rosa by any person pursuant to this section, or
to enjoin any violation or otherwise compel compliance with the requirements
of this chapter.
(F)Â
Limitations of Actions. No civil action shall be brought under the
provisions of this section unless said action is filed within two
years following the date of such violation.
(G)Â
Remedial Measures. If the District Attorney determines or believes
that any person (the target party) has violated any provision of this
chapter, the District Attorney may, at his or her sole discretion,
advise the target party of remedial measures which may be taken by
the target party to avoid possible civil action (the "remedial measures").
Such remedial measures may, but need not necessarily, include the
payment of a civil fine to the City. Nothing contained herein shall
be deemed to require the District Attorney to offer remedial measures
to any target party. In the event the target party is offered and
timely performs such remedial measures to the satisfaction of the
District Attorney, the District Attorney shall advise the target party
(and any person who, in writing, informed or complained to the District
Attorney concerning any such violation), in writing, that the alleged
violation has been resolved (the "letter of resolution") and, in such
event, no civil action shall thereafter be filed or maintained relating
to such alleged violation of this chapter.
(Ord. 4027 § 1, 2014)