Several bills tightening restrictions on California lawmakers are shelved

Published: June 1, 2011 

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Numerous bills to crack down on California lawmakers quietly have been shelved by the Legislature in recent weeks.

Casualties included proposals to bar middle-of-the-night legislative sessions, restrict lawmakers from receiving pay for serving on state boards within four years of leaving office, and to require annual disclosure by public officials of their pay, benefits, travel and other compensation.

Legislators opted not to dock per-diem pay for absences or to create a "do not call" list for campaign robocalls.

Republican state Sen. Sam Blakeslee said the death last week of his proposal to ban the flow of thousands of dollars in sports, golf, spa theme park and other gifts to legislators was no surprise.

"I think it's an embarrassment to the institution," said Blakeslee. "We aren't willing to get tough on politicians that are feeding at the trough, and frankly, it's an outrage."

Blakeslee's bill, like numerous others, was sidetracked by legislative leadership before a floor vote, allowing members who opposed the measures to avoid taking a stand that could haunt them in a re-election campaign. Bills killed this year could be revived in 2012. Read more at sacbee.com »

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