§ 200
Definitions
(a) "Approved political action committee"
means any person who receives contributions from one or more persons in order
to make contributions to candidates; does not accept any contribution or
cumulative contributions in excess of five thousand dollars ($5,000) from any
person in any calendar year; and has been registered with the Secretary of
State pursuant to Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-215
for at least four (4) continuous months prior to making contributions to
candidates. Approved political action committee does not include political
parties, the candidate's own campaign committee or an exploratory
committee.
(b) "Candidate" means
any person who has knowingly and willingly taken affirmative action, including
solicitation of funds, for the purpose of seeking nomination for or election to
any public office.1
(c) "Contribution" means, whether direct or
indirect, advances, deposits, or transfers of funds, contracts, or obligations,
whether or not legally enforceable, payments, gifts, subscriptions,
assessments, payment for services, dues, advancements, forbearance, loans,
pledge or promise of money or anything of value, whether or not legally
enforceable, to a candidate, committee, or holder of elective office, made for
the purpose of influencing the nomination or election of any candidate;
"Contribution" includes the purchase of tickets for events such
as dinners, luncheons, rallies, and similar fund-raising events; the granting
of discounts or rebates by television stations, radio stations, and newspapers
not extended on an equal basis to all candidates for the same office; and any
payments for the services of any person serving as an agent of a candidate or
committee by a person other than the candidate or committee or persons whose
expenditures the candidates or committee must report under this subchapter. The
term "contribution" further includes any transfer of anything of value received
by a committee from another committee; "Contribution" shall not include
noncompensated, nonreimbursed, volunteer personal services or
travel.2
(d) "Carryover funds" means the amount of
campaign funds retained from the last election by the candidate for future use
but not to exceed the annual salary, excluding expense allowances, set by
Arkansas law for the office sought.3
(e) "Election" means each election to be held
to nominate or elect a candidate to any public office, including school
elections. For the purposes of these rules, a preferential primary election, a
runoff election, a special election, and a general election shall each
constitute a separate election.4
(f) "Expenditure" means a purchase, payment,
distribution, gift, loan, or advance of money or anything of value, and a
contract, promise, or agreement to make an expenditure, made for the purpose of
influencing the nomination or election of any
candidate.5
(g) "Exploratory committee" means a person
who receives contributions which are held to be transferred to the campaign of
a single candidate in an election.
"Exploratory committee" shall not include an organized political
party as defined in Ark. Code Ann. §
7-1-101(16)
or the candidate's own campaign committee.6 For a
more detailed description of an "exploratory committee" and its duties,
see §§ 251-252 herein.
(h) "Fair market value" means the price the
good or service would bring between a willing seller and a willing buyer in the
open market after negotiations. See Minerva Enterprises, Inc.
v. Howlett, 308 Ark. 291, 824 S.W.2d 377 (1992).
(i) "Financial institution" means any
commercial bank, savings and loan, mutual savings bank or savings bank, credit
union, insurance company, brokerage house, or any corporation that is in the
business of lending money that is subject to state or federal
regulation.7
(j) "In-kind contribution" means a
contribution of goods, services, or any other thing of value, or its use, other
than money and includes an agreement made or other obligation incurred, whether
legally enforceable or not, to make such a contribution in the future. The term
does not include direct campaign contributions. For a more detailed discussion
of in-kind contributions, see § 205 of these
rules.
(k) "Person" means any
individual, proprietorship, firm, partnership, joint venture, syndicate, labor
union, business trust, company, corporation, association, committee, or any
other organization or group of persons acting in concert. It shall also include
organized political parties as defined in Ark. Code Ann. §
7-1-101(16).8
(l) "Political party" means any group of
voters which, at the last-preceding general election, polled for its candidate
for Governor in the state or nominees for presidential electors at least three
percent (3%) of the entire vote cast for the office; or which files with the
Secretary of State a petition signed by qualified electors equal in number to
at least three percent (3%) of the total vote cast for the Office of Governor
or nominees for presidential electors at the last-preceding election, declaring
their intention of organizing a political party, the name of which shall be
stated in the declaration, and of participating in the next-succeeding general
election.
The petition shall be filed with the Secretary of State not later
than the first Monday in May before the general election in which the political
party filing the petition desires to participate. No group of electors shall
assume a name or designation which is so similar, in the opinion of the
Secretary of State, to that of an existing political party as to confuse or
mislead the voters at an election.
When any political party fails to obtain three percent (3%) of
the total votes cast at an election for the Office of Governor or nominees for
presidential electors, it shall cease to be a political
party.9
(m) "Prohibited political action committee"
means any person who receives contributions from one or more persons in order
to make contributions to candidates but who does not meet the requirements of
an approved political action committee. "Prohibited political action committee"
shall not include an organized political party as defined in Ark. Code Ann.
§
7-1-101(16),
the candidate's own campaign committee, or an exploratory
committee.10
(n) "Public office" means any office created
by or under authority of the laws of the State of Arkansas, or of a subdivision
thereof, that is filled by the voters, except a federal
office.11
(o) "Small donor political action committee"
means any person who receives contributions from one or more individuals in
order to make contributions to candidates; does not accept any contribution or
cumulative contributions in excess of twenty-five dollars ($25) from any
individual in any calendar year; and has been registered with the Secretary of
State pursuant to Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-215
prior to making contributions to candidates. Small donor political action
committee does not include political parties, the candidate's own campaign
committee or an exploratory committee.12
(p) "Surplus campaign funds" means any
balance of campaign funds over expenses incurred as of the day of the election
except for:
(A) Carryover funds; and
(B) Any funds required to reimburse the
candidate for personal funds contributed to the campaign or to repay loans made
by financial institutions to the candidate and applied to the
campaign.13
§ 201
Loans
A candidate shall treat a loan of money or goods as a
contribution for purposes of campaign finance laws and of the rules that
follow. A candidate receiving a loan must disclose the loan as a contribution
on the proper Contribution and Expenditure Report. On the issue of loans,
see also § 225 and § 234
infra.
§
202
Prohibited Contributions
(a)
(1) A
candidate or a person acting on a candidate's behalf shall not accept any
contribution from a prohibited political action committee.
(2) A prohibited political action committee
shall not make any contribution to a candidate in an
election.14
(b) No campaign contribution shall be made to
a candidate, a political action committee, an independent expenditure
committee, an exploratory committee, or a political party unless such
contribution is made directly to the intended recipient, provided that it shall
be permissible to make a contribution to a candidate's campaign committee
instead of directly to the candidate.15
(c) No contribution shall be made to or
knowingly accepted by a candidate or his or her campaign committee, a political
action committee, an independent expenditure committee, an exploratory
committee, or a political party unless the contribution is made in the name by
which the person providing the funds for the contribution is identified for
legal purposes.16
(d)
(1) No
person shall make an anonymous contribution in support of or opposition to a
candidate or campaign committee totaling $50 or more in a calendar
year.
(2) The intended recipient
shall not keep an anonymous contribution of $50 or more; the recipient shall
promptly pay that contribution to the Secretary of State of Arkansas for
deposit in the State Treasury as general
revenues.17
(e) Whenever any person provides his or her
dependent child with funds and the child uses those funds to make a
contribution to a candidate, the contribution shall be attributed to such
person for purposes of applying the individual contribution limit.
18
(f) Campaign contributions may not be made by
individuals who are not citizens of the United States of America or by any
other entity which is not organized, existing, or created under the laws of the
United States or of any state or other place subject to the jurisdiction of the
United States and which does not have its principal place of business in the
United States.19
§ 203
Contribution Amounts
(a) A candidate or a person acting on the
candidate's behalf shall not accept contributions or cumulative contributions
which exceed $1,000 per person per election. A candidate may accept a campaign
contribution or contributions up to the maximum amount from any prospective
contributor for each election in which the candidate's name appears on the
ballot, whether opposed or unopposed.
(b) A person shall not make contributions or
cumulative contributions to a candidate or to a person acting on the
candidate's behalf which exceed $1,000 per person per election. A person may
make a contribution or contributions up to the maximum amount to a candidate
for each election in which the candidate's name appears on the ballot, whether
opposed or unopposed.
(c) The above
limitations shall not apply to:
(1) a
candidate's own contribution from his or her own personal funds;
(2) personal loans that financial
institutions make to a candidate and that are applied to his or her campaign;
or
(3) independent expenditures, as
defined in Ark Code Ann. §
7-6-201(10).
(d) A state political party may
contribute up to $2,500 to its candidate's campaign per
election.20
(e) A small donor political action committee,
as defined in Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-201(15),
may contribute up to $1,000 to a candidate's campaign per election.
(f) No campaign contribution exceeding $100
21 shall be received in cash nor shall any
campaign expenditure exceeding $50 be made in cash.
22
(g) All
contributions23 on behalf of a campaign activity,
other than in-kind contributions,24 in excess of
$100 shall be made by a written instrument containing the name of the donor and
the name of the payee.
(h) The
contribution limits herein are "per election," not "per election cycle." A
candidate may receive a contribution up to the maximum amount from any
prospective contributor for each preferential primary election, runoff
election, special election, or general election in which his or her name
appears on the ballot, whether opposed or unopposed in the election. If a
political party elects to use a caucus, rather than a primary election, in
which to select its candidate, the caucus shall be treated as an election for
campaign finance purposes and the maximum contribution limits shall be in
effect.
§ 204
Limitations on Soliciting and Accepting Contributions
A candidate, a person acting on the candidate's behalf, or an
exploratory committee shall not solicit or accept campaign contributions more
than two (2) years before an election in which the candidate seeks nomination
or election. This section shall not prohibit the solicitation or acceptance of
a contribution for the sole purpose of raising funds to retire a previous
campaign debt.25
§ 205
In-Kind
Contributions-Reporting and Value
(a)
In addition to monetary contributions, candidates are required to report the
receipt of any "in-kind contributions," as defined in § 200(j) of these
rules.
(b) For reporting purposes,
the value of an in-kind contribution shall be its fair market value if it had
been purchased, sold or leased in the ordinary course of business. An in-kind
contribution constitutes a contribution. Those transactions which are
specifically excluded from the definition of "contribution" are likewise
excluded from the definition of "in-kind contribution."
(c) A person makes an "in-kind contribution"
whenever, in conjunction with the nomination or election of a specific
candidate, such person purchases, sells or leases an item, or provides a
service to or on behalf of the candidate without charge or for a charge which
is less than the fair market value of the item or service provided. The
difference between the fair market value and the charge shall be the value of
the in-kind contribution. The donor of the item or service shall place the
value on the in-kind contribution when given. The candidate or someone
designated to act on his or her behalf, such as the treasurer of the campaign,
may question the value set by the donor if it appears unreasonable and shall
revalue the in-kind contribution to a reasonable value. The determination of an
in-kind contribution is a factual determination which shall be made by the
Ethics Commission.
(d) The transfer
of anything of value by a political party to a candidate, other than a direct
contribution or those items specifically listed as exemptions in Ark. Code Ann.
§
7-6-201(5),
shall constitute an in-kind contribution. A political advertisement by a
political party on behalf of a specifically named candidate expressly
advocating the election of the candidate or the defeat of the candidate's
opponent constitutes an in-kind contribution. However, public efforts,
including political advertisements, by political parties to promote the party's
platform or to inform the public of the party's views on certain issues, as
opposed to promoting the election or defeat of specific candidates, shall not
constitute an in-kind contribution to any candidate.
(e) The costs associated with any news story,
commentary or editorial distributed in the ordinary course of business by a
broadcasting station, newspaper or other periodical publication does not
constitute an in-kind contribution. Costs associated with nonpartisan
activities designed to encourage individuals to register to vote or to vote do
not constitute in-kind contributions. Finally, the costs associated with
internal organizational communications of business, labor, professional or
other associations which merely endorse a candidate do not constitute in-kind
contributions.
(f) Political
advertising, as detailed in subsection (d) above, supporting more than one
candidate and other forms of political marketing may be an in-kind
contribution. If political advertising or other mass political marketing
technique supports more than one candidate and is determined to be an in-kind
contribution, the amount of the contribution shall be determined and reported
by dividing the full value of the political advertising or marketing by the
number of persons benefited. Each candidate specifically listed by the
advertisement shall assume the pro rata share of the costs of
the contribution.
§
206
Volunteer Services-Exception to In-Kind
Contribution
(a) In addition to the
other exceptions noted in these rules, the value of volunteer services provided
without compensation do not constitute an in-kind contribution. Accordingly, an
individual may volunteer any personal service provided he or she is not
compensated for the service by any other individual or person. This applies
both to manual tasks (i.e., stuffing envelopes, answering
telephones, etc.) and to specialized services (i.e., services
provided by musicians, accountants, etc.). Whether a contribution has occurred
depends upon whether the work performed is considered "volunteer services."
Whether time is spent on a volunteer basis depends upon whether the services
are rendered during time that is the individual's own time to spend as he or
she sees fit. If services are rendered after working hours, they will typically
be viewed as exempted volunteer services.
(b) In accordance with subsection (a) above,
certain professional services, such as legal and accounting services, which
typically have fees associated with them, may be provided to a candidate on a
volunteer basis, provided the need for the services arises from the campaign.
For example, accounting or bookkeeping services involved with handling the
candidate's campaign financing may be provided to a candidate on a volunteer
basis and will not count as an "in-kind" contribution even if no fees are
charged.26
(c) An individual may use his or her home or
the recreational room of his or her residential complex for a candidate and/or
party-related activities and such use will not be deemed a contribution. Any
nominal fee charged for the use of the room is not considered a contribution.
An individual may buy food, beverage and
invitations27 used in connection with a candidate or
party-related activity conducted in his home or the recreational room of his or
her residential complex and such expenses will not be considered an "in-kind"
contribution, provided the expenditures do not exceed $1,000 per candidate per
election. Any amounts over $1,000 would need to be duly reported as an in-kind
contribution.
(d) An individual may
volunteer and obtain the use of a church or community center room for a
candidate or party-related activities without incurring an "in-kind"
contribution, provided the room is used on a regular basis without
charge by members of the community without regard to political
affiliation and for noncommercial purposes.
(e) An individual may spend a reasonable
amount for his or her normal living expenses incurred while engaging in
volunteer activity.
§
207
Personal Use of Campaign Funds
(a) A candidate shall not take campaign funds
as personal income. A candidate shall not take any campaign funds as income for
his or her spouse or dependent children, except that:
(1) An opposed candidate may employ his or
her spouse or dependent children as campaign
workers;28 and
(2) An opposed candidate who, during and
before the election, takes a leave of absence without pay from his primary
place of employment shall be authorized to take campaign funds before the
election as personal income up to the amount of employment income lost as a
result of such leave of absence.
(b) Campaign funds which are retained as
"carryover funds," as defined by § 200(d) of these rules and Ark. Code
Ann. §
7-6-201(3),
are treated as campaign funds and may not be taken as personal income or as
income for the candidate's spouse or dependent children.
§ 208
Use of Campaign
Funds-Personal Use Defined
(a) For
purposes of this section and throughout these rules, a present or former
candidate who uses campaign funds to fulfill any commitment, obligation or
expense that would exist regardless of the candidate's campaign or
responsibilities as an officeholder shall be deemed to have taken campaign
funds as personal income. The use of campaign funds to purchase a cake or other
perishable item of food at a fund-raising event held by a volunteer agency, as
defined in Ark. Code Ann. §
16-6-103,
shall not be considered a taking of campaign funds as personal
income.
(b) If an expense is the
result of campaign or officeholder activity, then it is not considered personal
use and not prohibited by those sections and subsections herein limiting the
personal use of campaign or surplus funds.
(c) For those candidates who lose an election
and, after disposing of surplus funds, have carryover funds remaining, or for
those officeholders who are no longer in office, personal use of such funds
remains prohibited for expenses unless the expenses relate to a future
candidacy.
§ 209
Personal Expenses-Prohibited Uses
Campaign funds may not be used to pay personal expenses. The
following expenses are considered "personal expenses" per se:
(a)
Household Food Items and
Supplies-This includes food purchased for day-to-day consumption in the
personal residence and supplies purchased to maintain the personal residence.
It does not include food and supplies for fund-raising activities (even if they
take place in the candidate's home) and food or refreshments for meetings and
gatherings related to the candidate's campaign.
(b)
Clothing-This includes all
attire for political or personal functions. It does not include clothing of
nominal value such as T-shirts or caps imprinted with a campaign logo or slogan
or the candidate's name. Such items may be purchased with campaign funds and
are a legitimate campaign expense.
(c)
Mortgage, Rent and Utility
Payments-This includes any payments with respect to a personal residence
of the candidate or his or her family, even if a portion of the residence is
used by the campaign. It does not include payments made with respect to other
buildings or offices or office space used solely for campaign purposes, such as
the company's headquarters, even if the candidate owns the space used, so long
as the space is not the candidate's personal residence and the campaign pays a
fair market value for use of the space. Furthermore, this prohibition does not
apply to long distance telephone calls/bills made for campaign purposes which
may originate from the candidate's residence.
(d)
Membership Dues, Fees or Other
Gratuitous Payments to Nonpolitical Organizations, Other Than
Charities-Campaign funds may not be used to make payments to a country
club, health club, recreational facility or other nonpolitical organization
unless the payments are made in connection with a fund-raising event or other
political event which takes place on the organization's premises. The
prohibition does not include membership dues in an organization which may offer
political contacts, such as community-based religious organizations, ethnic
organizations and other civic organizations.
(e)
Donations and Contributions to
Churches-Donations and contributions to churches are not allowed from
campaign funds while a candidate is seeking office unless the candidate had,
prior to deciding to run for office, regularly given money to the church or had
been a previous member of the particular church to which the expenditure is
intended. Following the conclusion of the campaign, a candidate may donate or
contribute surplus or carryover funds to nonprofit, tax-exempt organizations as
provided in Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-203(h)(1)(C).
(f)
Contributions to the Campaigns of
Others -Generally, campaign funds may not be used to make a contribution
to another candidate's campaign. Contributions are construed as a personal
matter and transferring a contribution from one campaign to another person's
campaign is considered a "personal use" of the funds. However, this general
rule is a rebuttable presumption. There could be times and circumstances when a
candidate may attend a fund raiser for another candidate and the purpose of
attending would be to further the candidate's own campaign. Therefore, buying a
ticket to the fund raiser would be permitted. Factual circumstances thus may
indicate a need to deviate from the general rule that campaign contributions
are personal uses of funds. As noted in § 210 below, for this reason, the
Commission will approach each such situation on a case-by-case basis with the
rebuttable presumption that such use is prohibited as a personal use of
campaign funds.29
§ 210
Personal Use-Determination
by Arkansas Ethics Commission
Whether an expense or use of campaign funds is to be considered a
"personal use" or "personal expense" and therefore prohibited by the law and
these rules is a factual determination to be made by the Arkansas Ethics
Commission on a case-by-case basis. A person may seek an advisory opinion from
the Commission concerning whether a particular use of funds is to be considered
"personal use."
§ 211
Automobile Expenses
(a) The
payment of travel expenses associated with automobile usage during a campaign
is allowable. If a candidate wishes to use campaign funds for reimbursement of
travel expenses, the following must be observed:
(1) The campaign may reimburse the candidate
and/or campaign workers for campaign-related travel on a reasonable mileage
rate not to exceed $ 0.28 per mile for actual miles driven relating to campaign
activity.30
(2) The campaign must maintain records
showing the date of travel, destination(s) involved, purpose of travel and
odometer readings of each trip for which reimbursement is allowed.
(3) The candidate will be held responsible to
ensure that accurate odometer readings are maintained.
(4) Maintenance costs should be paid from
personal funds, not campaign funds, as the rate per mile necessarily includes
depreciation and anticipated maintenance costs.
(5) Nothing in this rule shall prevent a
campaign from leasing a vehicle from a third party for campaign use. The
campaign may lease or rent a car for the exclusive use of the campaign,
provided it pays the fair market value of all costs associated with the car
pursuant to the lease or rent agreement.
(b) Following the election, the candidate may
not use campaign or surplus funds to reimburse the candidate or campaign
workers for automobile expenses or travel unless the expense is related solely
to pre-election travel and the request for the reimbursement had been submitted
to the campaign prior to the time of election or the expense relates solely to
retiring a campaign debt.
§
212
Use or Lease of Airplane During Campaign
(a) A campaign or candidate may use campaign
funds to lease an airplane for campaign purposes. As with automobile usage,
described in § 211 above, the campaign or the candidate should ensure that
accurate records are maintained and that the travel relates to campaign
activity before using campaign funds to pay for the lease.
(b) A candidate may lease an airplane to his
or her campaign from a company in which he or she has a financial interest and
pay for the lease from campaign funds. The lease payment must not exceed the
amount necessary to reimburse the leasing business for actual expenditures made
by the business related to the lease. If the candidate has a significant
financial interest in the leasing company, neither the candidate nor the
leasing company may make a profit from the lease agreement. When such a lease
occurs, the candidate should report the expenditure by itemizing the amount
paid, the date of payment, and the name and address of any person, including
the candidate, to whom the expenditure was
made.31
§ 213
Payment of Fines Associated
with Campaign
A campaign or candidate may use campaign funds to pay fines
associated with the campaign, as in the case of a fine issued by the Ethics
Commission for the late filing of a report. The payment of a fine for
violations relating to a candidate's campaign duties is a political expenditure
connected with the campaign and not a personal expense. If a fine is paid with
campaign funds, it must be reported as a campaign expenditure and itemized on
the next Contribution and Expenditure Report due, if exceeding
$100.32
§
214
Campaign Expenditures-Use of Funds to Employ Campaign
Workers, Including the Candidate and Family Members
(a) A candidate may use campaign funds to
employ people to work for the campaign and may pay those employees reasonable
wages or expenses provided payment relates to campaign activity. A candidate or
the campaign is allowed to hire employees or contract labor on a temporary
basis to assist in such campaign matters as conducting polls, providing
transportation for electors to the polls, posting signs and other forms of
political advertising, handling mail and telephone solicitation, and other
tasks related to campaign activity.
(b) A candidate who is unopposed may not use
campaign funds to employ family members. If the candidate has an opponent, he
or she may employ members of his or her family as campaign workers, provided
the wage paid is reasonable. What constitutes a reasonable wage is a factual
determination subject to review by the Arkansas Ethics Commission. Excessive
wages may be viewed as personal income in violation of Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-203.
(c) In addition to the personal income
exceptions noted above, a candidate who has an opponent and who during and
before the election takes a leave of absence without pay from his primary place
of employment shall be authorized to use campaign funds as personal income up
to the amount of employment lost as a result of the leave. See
§ 207(a)(2) herein.
§ 215
Campaign
Expenditures-Political Conferences or Appearances
(a) Candidates may use campaign funds to
reimburse themselves for attendance to in-state or out-of-state conferences or
seminars on general political issues. During the campaign, funds may be used to
reimburse campaign staff and spouses provided their attendance to these
conferences relates to the campaign. After an election, neither surplus funds
nor carryover funds may be used to reimburse campaign workers, staff or spouses
of either the candidate or the workers for attendance at conferences.
Officeholders are permitted to use carryover funds to reimburse only themselves
for travel associated with general political activity.
(b) After an election, former candidates and
officeholders may only use campaign funds for reimbursement of future general
political activity and travel if there is a carryover fund, as defined by Ark.
Code Ann. §
7-6-201(3)
and § 200(d) of these rules, remaining and available to the former
candidate. A surplus must have been declared properly at the end of the
election and reported in a timely fashion and the use of the carryover funds
must be reported on the Carryover Fund Reporting Form pursuant to Ark. Code
Ann. §
7-6-203(h)(3)(C).
(c) The use of campaign funds or carryover
funds after an election, as outlined in (a) and (b) above, is only available
for those candidates or officeholders who ended their respective campaigns with
a carryover fund. Candidates or officeholders who end their campaigns either
with no carryover or in debt may not use or raise campaign funds for or through
general political activity or travel. Candidates who end campaigns in debt may
not seek reimbursement for any post-election travel unless the travel is
related to an event or fund-raising effort designed for the sole purpose of
retiring the campaign debt. Whether travel solely relates to efforts to retire
a debt is a factual determination to be made by the Arkansas Ethics Commission
on a case-by-case basis.
§
216
Time of Making Expenditure
(a) The date of a campaign or post-campaign
expenditure is the date the amount is readily ascertainable by the person
making the expenditure, except as provided in subsection (b) of this
section.
(b) If, under normal
business practices, the amount of an expenditure is not known or readily
ascertainable until receipt of a periodic bill, the date of the expenditure is
the date the bill is received. Examples of expenditures to which this
subsection is applicable are expenditures for utilities and telephone
bills.
(c) An expenditure by credit
card or in other ways charged to an account must be included in the report for
the period during which the charge was made, not in the report for the period
during which the statement from the credit card company or charge account was
received.
§ 217
Campaign Cash Expenditures
(a)
Except as noted in subsection (c) below, no campaign expenditure in excess of
fifty dollars ($50) shall be made in cash.
(b) All expenditures on behalf of a campaign
activity, in excess of fifty dollars ($50), shall be made by a written
instrument containing the name of the payee.
(c) The payment of filing fees may be in cash
even though the amount exceeds fifty dollars ($50). The candidate shall obtain
a receipt for the payment and shall report it as a campaign
expenditure.
§ 218
Description of Campaign Expenditures
The report disclosing a campaign expenditure for goods or
services must describe the category(ies) of goods or services received in
exchange for the expenditure. It is not sufficient simply to list the
payee.
§ 219
Reporting Expenditures by Credit Card
(a) In addition to the reporting requirements
outlined in § 216(c) and § 218 above, report of an expenditure by
credit card must identify the vendor who receives the payment from the credit
card company. The nature of the expenditures should be included in the
applicable category on the Contribution and Expenditure Report.
(b) Expenditures by credit card should not be
reflected or reported as lump sum expenditures. Instead, expenditures by credit
card are to be itemized showing:
(1) Name of
vendor;
(2) Amount of payment or
expense;
(3) Date of expense;
and
(4) Item purchased or reason
for expenditure.
§
220
Allowable Expenditures-Purchase of Advertisements and
Awards
(a) Candidates and officeholders
may purchase advertisements in publications of charitable, civic and
educational organizations. This is permissible for officeholders even if the
expenses are related to their holding office and not reimbursable by the state.
Campaign and post-campaign surplus and carryover funds may be used to buy items
such as ads in school yearbooks, as these purchases serve to increase public
visibility for the candidates and officeholders.
(b) Following an election, but not before, a
candidate or officeholder, who ends his or her campaign with carryover funds
may use those funds to purchase items given as awards in recognition of
accomplishments where they are presented by a current officeholder in person.
Such items include the purchase of American and State flags flown at the State
Capitol and given to schools in subsequent ceremonies.
§ 221
Allowable
Expenditures-Purchase of Banquet Tickets for Political Events
(a) Candidates may purchase tickets from
charities, civic organizations and political parties for banquets or other
similar special social events. This includes the purchase of a table if the
customary and normal practice of the banquet is the purchasing of a table as
opposed to individual tickets. Purchase of tickets for a candidate's spouse and
campaign workers is likewise permissible with campaign funds. The presence at a
banquet increases public visibility of candidates. If the candidate purchases a
table of seats or tickets, the candidate shall make all reasonable efforts to
attend the banquet.
(b)
Officeholders who ended their campaigns with carryover funds may use these
funds to purchase tickets from charities, civic organizations and political
parties for banquets or other similar special social events. The presence of
officeholders increases the public visibility of officeholders and, for that
reason, officeholders who purchase tickets should make all reasonable efforts
to attend the banquet. Officeholders may use carryover funds to purchase a
ticket for a spouse, but carryover funds should not be used to purchase tickets
for State Capitol staff, current staff or former campaign
workers.
§ 222
Allowable Expenditures-Office Equipment
(a) Candidates and officeholders may use
campaign or carryover funds for lease, rental or use charges of any ordinary
and necessary campaign office equipment including, but not limited to, copy
machines, telephones, postage meters, facsimile machines, computer hardware and
software, printers, and video equipment.
(b) Party committees, candidate committees
and political committees organized for ongoing political activities may
purchase space or office equipment for ongoing political
concerns.
§ 223
Allowable Expenditures-Miscellaneous Campaign-Related Expenditures
(a) In addition to those expenditures listed
throughout these rules and regulations, candidates and officeholders are free
to expend campaign funds on any purpose designed to further their campaign or
office as long as it is not for personal income or otherwise prohibited by law.
Examples of other miscellaneous expenses on which candidates or officeholders
may lawfully expend money include, but are not limited to:
(1) Flowers, sympathy gifts or other nominal
memorial items to a constituent's funeral or family;
(2) Hiring public halls and music for
political meetings, furnishing music, uniforms, banners or fireworks for
political clubs, parades or like events and for related advertising of
same;
(3) Printing and circulating
political communications, sample ballots or ballot labels; and
(4) Sponsorship of a sports team.
(b) This list is not exhaustive.
As noted, the determination whether a campaign expense is allowable is a
factual determination to be made by the Arkansas Ethics Commission on a
case-by-case basis. The Commission may periodically issue advisory opinions
determining allowable expenditures and such opinions should be considered as an
addition to any listing of expenditures herein.
§ 224
Campaign Assets
After a campaign has ended, campaign assets must be disposed of
in the manner prescribed by Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-203(h),
whether by sale of property for money or transfer of property in accordance
with Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-203(h).33
The candidate is responsible for assigning a fair market value to all assets of
the campaign.34
§ 225
Repayment of Loans
After a general election, a candidate may retain any campaign
contributions required to reimburse the candidate for personal funds
contributed to the campaign or to repay loans made by financial institutions to
the candidate and applied to the
campaign.35
§ 226
Surplus or Carryover
Funds
(a) In ascertaining the amount of
surplus campaign funds, as defined in § 200(p), the candidate shall take
the total of all cash on hand (currency), balances on deposit in any bank or
other depository institution, money orders, checks, traveler's checks or cash
equivalents, certificates of deposit, treasury bills, and any other investment
by the candidate or his or her committee valued at fair market value with the
total amounts owed to the candidate or his or her committee in the form of
credits, refunds or returns, or receivables and subtract therefrom the sum of
the total amount of unpaid debts and obligations incurred with respect to the
election.
(b) A candidate who has
surplus campaign funds, as defined in § 200(p), not otherwise obligated
for the payment of campaign expenses incurred, shall disclose on the final
report filed following the general election, how such surplus funds were
distributed. The surplus funds may be turned over to:
(1) The Treasurer of Arkansas for the benefit
of the General Revenue Fund Account of the State Apportionment Fund;
(2) An organized political party as defined
in Ark. Code Ann. §
7-1-101(16)
or a political party caucus of the Arkansas General Assembly, the Senate or
House of Representatives;
(3) A
nonprofit organization which is exempt from taxation under Section 501(c)(3) of
the Internal Revenue Code; or
(4)
The contributors to the candidate's campaign.
(c) Notwithstanding the provisions of §
226(b)(1)-(4), the candidate may elect to retain from the surplus an amount as
carryover funds. Carryover funds shall be the amount of
campaign funds retained from the last election by the candidate for future use
but not to exceed the annual salary, excluding expense allowances, set by
Arkansas law for the office sought. If funds are retained pursuant to this
section, they may be used as provided for in § 227 of these
rules.
(d) If an unopposed
candidate agrees not to solicit further campaign contributions by filing an
affidavit declaring such agreement, the candidate may dispose of any surplus
campaign funds prior to a general election as soon as the time has passed to
declare an intent to be a write-in candidate pursuant to Ark. Code Ann. §
7-5-205.
The affidavit shall be filed with the county clerk in the county where the
candidate resides and, in the event the candidate is seeking a state or
district office, also with the Secretary of State. Unopposed candidates and
defeated candidates who file the affidavit are exempt from further reporting
requirements provided that the affidavit contains a statement that the
candidate's fund has a zero balance.
§ 227
Carryover Funds-Used as
Officeholder Expenses
(a) In addition
to the uses of carryover funds as described in §§ 220-223 above, an
officeholder with carryover funds may use such funds for future office-related
or future campaign expenses. Nothing shall prohibit a person at any time from
disposing of his or her carryover funds in the same manner that surplus
campaign funds could be expended.
(b) If funds are retained pursuant to §
226(d) of this chapter, the candidate shall establish an office account,
separate from any personal or other account. Any carryover funds transferred to
this account shall be used only for future campaigns involving the candidate in
a non-federal office and/or legitimate expenses in connection with the
candidate's public office.
(c)
Legitimate office expenses include transportation incurred by the officeholder
or a member of his or her staff incurred in the operation of the office. The
funds may be used to purchase office supplies and/or equipment for use in the
office or in future campaigns, or to purchase advertisements for the office in
such publications as a school's yearbook. The funds may be used to reimburse
the officeholder or his or her staff for meals or lodging in connection with
the operation of the office or future campaigns. The funds may be used to
purchase invitations or notices to political events, as well as to purchase
gifts or commemorative items for staff members or their families in times of
sickness, death, or family emergency. The funds could be used to offset any
reasonable and legitimate office expense which is otherwise not reimbursable
from public funding.
(d) The office
account funds may be deposited in an interest-bearing account; however, all
deposits, withdrawals and interest earned thereon shall be reported on the
appropriate Contribution and Expenditure Report during the applicable reporting
period. If the candidate seeks reelection to office or election to another
office, the funds remaining may be transferred to the new campaign account. The
candidate may also choose to transfer surplus campaign funds from future
elections to the office account upon reelection or election to another office.
At no time, however, may the total amount of the office account exceed the
yearly salary, excluding expense allowances, for the office sought or
held.
(e) Upon leaving public
office, any person who has funds in an carryover account pursuant to this
subsection remaining on deposit shall be able to retain such funds for not more
than ten (10) years after the last election at which he or she was a
candidate.36 The person may give such funds to the
State Treasurer to be deposited in the General Revenue Fund, to an organized
political party as defined by Ark. Code Ann. §
7-1-101(16)
or a political party caucus of the Arkansas General Assembly, the Senate or
House of Representatives, or to a nonprofit organization which is exempt from
taxation under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. Upon leaving
public office, funds remaining in the carryover office account may not be given
to previous contributors.
(f) No
candidate, nor any person on behalf of a candidate, may accept contributions or
funds after the candidate has withdrawn his or her nomination or after the
candidate has been eliminated as a candidate.
(g) For all carryover funds related to
elections after July 1, 1997, any person having carryover funds and who later
files as a candidate for another public office, shall be required to transfer
his or her carryover funds into the person's new active campaign account upon
filing for the position. Once transferred, the funds will no longer be treated
as carryover funds.37
§ 228
Carryover Funds-Time Frame
for Reporting Expenditures
Any time carryover funds in excess of $500 are expended,
including the disposal of such funds pursuant to § 227(e), the
expenditures shall be reported on the Carryover Fund Reporting Form. The report
shall be filed no later than fifteen (15) days after a calendar quarter in
which a report becomes required. No report is required in any calendar quarter
in which the cumulative expenditure limit has not been exceeded since the
person's last report. If no quarterly report has been filed within a calendar
year pursuant to this section, then a person who retains carryover funds shall
file an annual report outlining the status of the carryover fund account as of
December 31. This annual report shall be due by January 31 of each year. The
carryover fund reports of a candidate for school district, township, municipal,
or county office shall be filed with the county clerk of the county in which
the election was held. The carryover fund reports of a candidate for state or
district office shall be filed with the Secretary of State.
§ 229
Retirement of Debt
(a) At the time when the candidate's final
report is due (the end of the month following the last election), the candidate
shall determine the current status of the campaign account and ascertain
whether the campaign ended in surplus or in debt. In order to determine whether
there is a net debt outstanding from a particular election, the candidate must
prove net debts outstanding as of the date of the election.
(b) For purposes of this section,
"
net debts outstanding" means the total amount of unpaid
debts, loans and obligations incurred with respect to the campaign, less the
sum of:
(1) The total cash on hand available
to pay those debts, loans and obligations, including: currency; balances on
deposit in banks and other financial institutions; checks; drafts; money
orders; traveler's checks; certificates of deposit; treasury bills; and any
other candidate or committee investments valued at fair market value;
and
(2) The total amount owed to
the candidate or political committee in the form of credits, refunds of
deposits, returns or receivables, or a commercially reasonable amount based on
the collectibility of those credits, refunds, returns, or
receivables.
(c) For
purposes of this section, any bill or matter not listed as a debt as of the
filing of the final report and any obligation not included on the final report
and for which there is no proof of receipt or existence of bill or other
documentation of expenditure or indebtedness as of the filing of the final
report, shall not be considered as part of the net debts outstanding.
(d) Matters which will not be considered as
legitimate campaign debts include, but are not limited to: campaign workers'
salary bonuses; mileage on behalf of the candidate or any member of the
candidate's immediate family, unless said mileage was regularly paid by the
candidate throughout the campaign; postage, photocopying, meals, lodging or
utility bills or other miscellaneous bills which, during the campaign, were not
billed to the campaign nor paid by the campaign, but billed to and/or paid by
the candidate or the candidate's family unless, at the time of filing the final
monthly report, the candidate is able to provide an itemization of each bill
which constitutes the debt and for which retirement is sought.
(e) For purposes of this section, "reasonable
and legitimate costs and administrative expenses of debt retirement," means
those post-election expenses directly related to a particular debt retirement
function, performed not for matters generally incidental to political activity
or holding an office, but for matters specifically and solely related to
retiring a legitimate campaign debt. If the expense is for personnel services
or staff salaries, such services or salaries must be directly and solely for
the express purpose of retiring the campaign debt(s) noted by the candidate in
his or her final monthly report and not related to general political functions
incidental to holding an office or campaigning for a future office. An expense
is "reasonably and legitimately related to debt retirement" if it is generated
by activity which, but for the existence of a legitimate campaign debt and
efforts to retire same, would not otherwise have been undertaken and the
related expense not otherwise incurred.
(f) The prohibition against soliciting or
accepting campaign contributions more than two (2) years before an election at
which a candidate seeks nomination or election shall not apply to the
solicitation or acceptance of a contribution for the sole purpose of raising
funds to retire a previous campaign debt. Contributions received for debt
retirement shall be treated as contributions to the candidate's previous
election, and all campaign contribution limits shall continue to apply. If a
contributor makes a contribution after the general election, to retire a debt
associated with the general election, the campaign limits applicable to
contributions for the general election would apply.
(g) A candidate who is a candidate in the
general election may pay primary election debts and obligations with funds
obtained through contributions made towards the general election
campaign.
(h) A person shall file a
Campaign Contribution and Expenditure Report concerning a campaign debt if,
since the last report concerning the debt, the person has received cumulative
contributions in excess of five hundred dollars ($500). The report shall be
filed not later than fifteen (15) days after a calendar quarter in which a
report becomes required. No report is required in any calendar quarter in which
the cumulative contribution or cumulative expenditure limit has not been
exceeded since the person's last report.
§ 230
Retirement of Past Campaign
Debts
(a) Candidates and officeholders
are permitted to raise funds to retire campaign debts from prior campaigns.
Funds can be raised after a current campaign has ended or during a current
campaign provided the notice requirements of § 229 of these rules are
fulfilled. If there is another ongoing campaign account, candidates or
officeholders should ensure that a separate account is established for the
purpose of retiring the prior campaign debts. Surplus funds from a current
campaign account, however, may be used to retire the debt, as explained in
§ 230(b) and (d) below, provided the candidate has ended the current
campaign and the debt relates to personal loans to a prior campaign.
(b) If a candidate or officeholder desires to
raise funds to retire a prior debt at a time when a different campaign is
ongoing, the candidate or officeholder must ensure that the notice explains
that the debt to be retired relates to a specific prior campaign and not the
current ongoing campaign.
(c) A
candidate, whose prior campaign debts relate to funds or personal loans and the
repayment of such debts or loans would be in the form of reimbursement to the
candidate, may wait until the current campaign has ended and use surplus funds
to repay prior campaign loans the candidate may have made to his or her
campaign.
(d) A candidate, whose
prior campaign debts relate to funds other than personal loans or personal
contributions, may not use surplus funds from a current campaign to repay debts
relating to a different campaign. Instead, the candidate must retire the prior
debt in the manner described in § 229 above.
§ 231
Contributions by Children
and Spouses
(a) Whenever a person
provides his or her dependent children with funds and the child uses those
funds to make a contribution to a candidate, the contribution shall be
attributed to such person for purposes of applying the contribution limits per
election.
(b) Contributions by
independent children and spouses of contributors will be attributed to the
independent children and the spouse individually provided the independent
children or the spouse intended to make such a contribution on his or her own
behalf.
§ 232
Political Party and Group Activities-Exceptions to the Definitions of
Contribution and Expenditure
For purposes of these rules and laws governing campaign finance,
the terms "contribution" and "expenditure" shall not include activity sponsored
and funded by organized political parties, as defined in Ark. Code Ann. §
7-1-101(16),
to promote their candidates or nominees through events such as dinners,
luncheons, rallies, or similar gatherings and shall not include nonpartisan
activity designed to encourage individuals to vote or register to vote, or any
communication by any membership organization to its members or stockholders if
the membership organization or corporation is not organized primarily for the
purpose of influencing the nomination for election or election of any
candidate.
§ 233
Records of Contributions and Expenditures
(a) A candidate, a political party, or a
person acting on a candidate's behalf shall keep records of all contributions
and expenditures in a manner sufficient to evidence compliance with these rules
and the campaign finance disclosure laws, Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-201
et
seq.
(b) The records shall
be made available to the Arkansas Ethics Commission and the prosecuting
attorney in the district in which the candidate resides and such records shall
be maintained for a period of no less than four (4) years.
(c) If a candidate ends a campaign with
carryover funds as defined by Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-201(3)
and § 200(d) of these rules, he or she must maintain records of such
carryover fund for no less than ten (10) years or until such time as the funds
are expended completely or disposed of, whichever occurs first.
(d) The information required by these
reporting and disclosure rules, including any and all Contribution and
Expenditure Reports, shall, upon proper filing, constitute a public record and
shall be available within twenty-four (24) hours of the reporting deadline to
all interested persons and the news
media.38
§ 234
Reporting of Loans for All
Candidates for Public Office
(a) Any
personal loan a financial institution makes to a candidate that is applied to a
candidate's campaign shall be reported as a campaign
contribution.39
(b) The candidate or someone acting on the
candidate's behalf shall report the name of the financial institution, the
amount of the loan, and the name of the guarantor.
40
Example: On April 5, 1996, Candidate Jane receives a $2,000 loan
from Commercial Bank. She will use this loan to pay her campaign expenses. On
her April report of contributions and expenditures, Candidate Jane will
disclose that she received a $2,000 loan from Commercial Bank on April 5, 1996,
listing it as a contribution. She must also disclose Commercial Bank's address
and the guarantor's name (if there was a guarantor).
§ 235
Verification of Contribution and Expenditure Reports-All
Candidates
All Contribution and Expenditure Reports filed by candidates
shall be verified by affidavit of the candidate or a person acting on the
candidate's behalf. This affidavit shall state that, to the best of the
candidate's knowledge and belief, the information so disclosed is a complete,
true and accurate financial statement of the candidate's campaign contributions
or expenditures.41
§ 236
Reports of
Contributions-Candidates for Office Other Than School District, Township,
Municipal or County Office
Required Reports and Time for Filing
(a) For all candidates for office other than
school district, township, municipal, or county office, the candidate or any
person acting on the candidate's behalf shall comply with the filings required
by these sections beginning with the first reporting period, either quarterly,
monthly, or preelection, in which his total contributions or expenditures
exceed five hundred dollars ($500). The payment of a filing fee from the
candidate's personal funds must be reported as a campaign expenditure but shall
not be counted towards the five hundred dollar ($500) reporting trigger.
See § 238(b), infra.
(b) Except as provided in § 238 of these
rules and Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-207(c),
each candidate for office, other than a school district, township, municipal,
or county office, or a person acting on the candidate's behalf, shall file with
the Secretary of State the following Contribution and Expenditure Reports:
(1) For each quarter during a calendar year
in which a candidate is not listed on any ballot for election, a quarterly
report of all contributions received and expenditures made during that quarter.
The quarterly report shall be filed no later than fifteen (15) days after the
end of each quarter;
(2) Beginning
with the month of January in the calendar year in which a candidate may be
listed on any ballot for election, a monthly report of all contributions
received and expenditures made during that month. However, for any month in
which certain days of that month are included in a preelection report required
under subsection (3) of this rule and Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-207(a)(1)(C)
or a final report required under subsection (4) of this rule and Ark. Code Ann.
§
7-6-207(a)(1)(D),
no monthly report for that month shall be due. In the case of a primary or
runoff election, those days of the month occurring after the date of such
election shall be carried forward and included in the next monthly report. The
monthly report shall be filed no later than fifteen (15) days after the end of
each month. With respect to a special election, the candidate shall file
monthly reports beginning with the month in which the special election
candidate's total campaign contributions or expenditures exceed five hundred
dollars ($500);
(3) No later than
seven (7) days prior to any preferential primary election, runoff election,
general election, or special election in which the candidate's name appears on
the ballot, a candidate must file a preelection report of all contributions
received and expenditures made between the period covered by the previous
report and the period ten (10) days before the election. In case of a runoff
election, the report shall cover all contributions received and expenditures
made during the period of time which begins after the date of the election from
which the runoff arose and ends ten (10) days before the runoff election;
and
(4) No later than thirty (30)
days after the end of the month in which the candidate's name has appeared on
the ballot in any primary election, runoff election, or general election, a
final report of all contributions received and expenditures made which have not
been disclosed on reports previously required to be filed. The final report
closes out the handling of the financing for the particular election
(e.g., primary) and the balance, if any, shall be brought
forward to the first monthly report for the next election
(e.g., general). A final report is required regardless of
whether a candidate has received contributions or made expenditures in excess
of five hundred dollars ($500).
(c) Any report, except a preelection report,
is timely filed if it is either hand-delivered or mailed to the Secretary of
State properly addressed, postage prepaid, bearing a postmark indicating that
it was received by the post office or common carrier on or before the date it
was due. A preelection report is timely filed if it is received in the
Secretary of State's office no later than seven (7) days prior to the election
for which it is filed. The Secretary of State shall accept via facsimile any
report, provided the original is received by the Secretary of State within ten
(10) days of the transmission. The Secretary of State may receive reports in a
readable electronic format which is acceptable to the Secretary of State and
approved by the Arkansas Ethics Commission.
§ 237
Contents of Reports of
Contributions and Expenditures-Candidates for Office Other Than School
District, Township, Municipal or County Office
(a) The Contribution and Expenditure Reports
referenced above in § 236 shall indicate:
(1) The total amount of contributions
received and the total amount of expenditures made during the filing periods,
and the cumulative amount of those totals;
(2) The name and address of each person,
including the candidate, who made a contribution or contributions which, in the
aggregate, exceeds fifty dollars ($50);
(3) The contributor's principal place of
business, employer, occupation, amount contributed, the date the contribution
was accepted by the candidate, and the aggregate contributed for each
election;
(4) The name and address
of each person, including the candidate, who contributed a nonmoney item,
together with a description of the item, the date of receipt and the value, not
including volunteer services by individuals;
(5) An itemization of all single expenditures
made which exceed one hundred dollars ($100) including the amount of the
expenditure, the name and address of any person, including the candidate, to
whom the expenditure was made, and the date the expenditure was made;
(6) A list of all paid campaign workers and
the amount the workers were paid;
(7) A list of all expenditures by category,
including, but not limited to, television, radio, print, and other advertising,
direct mail, office supplies, rent, travel, expenses, entertainment and
telephone;
(8) The total amount of
all nonitemized expenditures made during the filing period; and
(9) The current balance of campaign
funds.
(b) In addition
to the requirements noted above in (a), the final report for the general
election, or for the primary if the candidate fails to win the primary, shall
also indicate how the surplus funds, if any, were disposed of pursuant to Ark.
Code Ann. §
7-6-203(h)
and § 226 of the rules, and shall indicate the amount of funds retained by
the candidate as carryover funds.
(c) Candidates for state and district offices
shall file Campaign Contribution and Expenditure Reports with the Secretary of
State.
§ 238
Exceptions to Filing Reports of Contributions-Candidates for Office Other
Than School District, Township, Municipal or County Office
(a) For those candidates covered by
§§ 236 -237, the candidate or person acting on the candidate's behalf
shall comply with the filings required by this section upon receiving
contributions or making expenditures totaling in excess of five hundred dollars
($500).
(b) A candidate who has not
received contributions or made expenditures in excess of five hundred dollars
($500) shall not be required to file any reports other than the final report(s)
required under § 236(b)(4). In calculating the amount of contributions
received or expenditures made for purposes of this exception, the payment of a
filing fee from the candidate's personal funds shall not be considered as
either a contribution or expenditure.
(c) The preelection reports referenced in
§ 236(b)(3) are only required for candidates with opponents in those
elections.
§ 239
Reports of Contributions-Candidates for School District, Township, or
Municipal Office
Required Reports and Time for Filing
Except as provided in § 241 of these rules and Ark. Code
Ann. §
7-6-208(d),
each candidate for a school district, township, or municipal office, or a
person acting on the candidate's behalf, shall file with the county clerk in
the county where the election is held on the appropriate forms furnished by the
Secretary of State, the following Contribution and Expenditure Reports:
(a) No later than seven (7) days prior to any
preferential primary election, runoff election, general election, school
election or special election in which the candidate's name appears on the
ballot, file a preelection report of all contributions received and
expenditures made between the period covered by the previous report, if any,
and the period ten (10) days before the election. In case of a runoff election,
the report shall cover all contributions received and expenditures made during
that period of time which begins after the date of the election from which the
runoff arose and ends ten (10) days before the runoff election;
(b) No later than thirty (30) days after any
preferential primary election, runoff election, general election, school
election, or special election in which the candidate's name has appeared on the
ballot, file a final report of all contributions received and expenditures made
which have not been disclosed on reports previously required to be filed. A
final report is required regardless of whether a candidate has received
contributions or made expenditures in excess of five hundred dollars ($500);
and
(c) File supplemental reports
of all contributions received and expenditures made after the date of
preparation of the final report, and the supplemental reports shall be filed
within thirty (30) days after the receipt of a contribution or the making of an
expenditure.
§ 240
Contents of Reports of Contributions-Candidates for School District,
Township, or Municipal Office
The Campaign Contribution and Expenditure Reports required by
§ 239 shall indicate:
(a) The
total amount of contributions received and the expenditures made during the
filing periods and the cumulative amount of these totals;
(b) The name and address of each person,
including the candidate, who has made a contribution or contributions which, in
the aggregate, exceed fifty dollars ($50), the contributor's place of business,
employer, occupation, the date of the contribution, the amount contributed and
the aggregate contributed for each election;
(c) The name and address of each person,
including the candidate, who contributed a nonmoney item, together with a
description of the item, the date of receipt, and the value, not including
volunteer service by individuals;
(d) An itemization of all single expenditures
made which exceed one hundred dollars ($100), including the amount of the
expenditure, the name and address of any person, including the candidate, to
whom the expenditure was made, and the date of the expenditure;
(e) A list of all paid campaign workers and
the amount the workers were paid;
(f) A list of all expenditures by category,
including, but not limited to, television, radio, print and other advertising,
direct mail, office supplies, rent, travel, expenses, entertainment, and
telephone;
(g) The total amount of
all nonitemized expenditures during the filing period; and
(h) The current balance of campaign funds.
The final report shall also indicate which option under Ark. Code
Ann. §
7-6-203(h)
and § 226(c) of these rules was used to dispose of any surplus campaign
funds, as well as provide the amount of carryover funds retained by the
candidate.
§
241
Exceptions to Filing Reports of Contributions-Candidates
for School District, Township, or Municipal Office
(a) For those candidates covered by
§§ 239-240, the candidate or person acting on the candidate's behalf
shall comply with the filings required by this section upon receiving
contributions or making expenditures totaling in excess of five hundred dollars
($500).
(b) A candidate or any
person acting on the candidate's behalf who has not received contributions or
made expenditures in excess of five hundred dollars ($500) as of the date a
preelection report is due, shall not be required to file the preelection report
required by Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-208(a)(1)
and § 239(a). In calculating the amount of contributions received or
expenditures made for purposes of this exception, the payment of the filing fee
from the candidate's personal funds shall not be considered as either a
contribution or an expenditure.
(c)
The preelection reports referenced in § 239(a) are only required for
candidates with opponents in those elections.
§ 242
Reports of
Contributions-Candidates for County Office
Required Reports and Time For Filing
Except as provided in § 244 of these rules and Ark. Code
Ann. §
7-6-209(d),
each candidate for a county office, or a person acting on the candidate's
behalf, shall file with the county clerk in the county where the election is
held on the appropriate forms furnished by the Secretary of State, the
following Contribution and Expenditure Reports:
(a) No later than seven (7) days prior to any
preferential primary election, runoff election, general election, or special
election in which the candidate's name appears on the ballot, file a
preelection report of all contributions received and expenditures made between
the period covered by the previous report, if any, and the period ten (10) days
before the election. In case of a runoff election, the report shall cover all
contributions received and expenditures made during that period of time which
begins after the date of the election from which the runoff arose and ends ten
(10) days before the runoff election;
(b) No later than thirty (30) days after any
preferential primary election, runoff election, general election, or special
election in which the candidate's name has appeared on the ballot, file a final
report of all contributions received and expenditures made which have not been
disclosed on reports previously required to be filed. A final report is
required regardless of whether a candidate has received contributions or made
expenditures in excess of five hundred dollars ($500); and
(c) File supplemental reports of all
contributions received and expenditures made after the date of preparation of
the final report, and the supplemental reports shall be filed within thirty
(30) days after the receipt of a contribution or the making of an
expenditure.
§ 243
Contents of Reports of Contributions-Candidates for County Office
The campaign contribution reports required by § 242 shall
indicate:
(a) The total amount of
contributions received during the filing periods and the name and address of
each person, including the candidate, who has made a contribution or
contributions which, in the aggregate, exceed fifty dollars ($50), the
contributor's place of business, employer, occupation, and the date of the
contribution, the amount contributed and the aggregate contributed for each
election;
(b) The name and address
of each person, including the candidate, who contributed a nonmoney item,
together with a description of the item, the date of receipt, and the value,
not including volunteer service by individuals;
(c) An itemization of all single expenditures
made which exceed one hundred dollars ($100), including the amount of the
expenditure, the name and address of any person, including the candidate, to
whom the expenditure was made, and the date of the expenditure;
(d) A list of all paid campaign workers and
the amount the workers were paid;
(e) A list of all expenditures by category,
including, but not limited to, television, radio, print and other advertising,
direct mail, office supplies, rent, travel, expenses, entertainment, and
telephone;
(f) The total amount of
all nonitemized expenditures during the filing period; and
(g) The current balance of campaign funds.
In addition to the information required in subsection (a), the
final report shall also indicate which option under Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-203(h)
and § 226(c) of these rules was used to dispose of any surplus campaign
funds, as well as provide the amount of carryover funds retained by the
candidate.
§
244
Exceptions to Filing Reports of Contributions-Candidates
for County Office
(a) For those
candidates covered by §§ 242-243, the candidate or person acting on
the candidate's behalf shall comply with the filings required by this section
upon receiving contributions or making expenditures totaling in excess of five
hundred dollars ($500).
(b) A
candidate or any person acting on the candidate's behalf who has not received
contributions or made expenditures in excess of five hundred dollars ($500) as
of the date a preelection report is due, shall not be required to file the
preelection report required by Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-208(a)(1)
and § 242(a). In calculating the amount of contributions received or
expenditures made for purposes of this exception, the payment of the filing fee
from the candidate's personal funds shall not be considered as either a
contribution or an expenditure.
(c)
The preelection reports referenced in § 242(a) are only required for
candidates with opponents in those elections.
§ 245
Prohibited Campaign
Activities Concerning Public Servants and Public Property
(a) No public servant shall devote any time
or labor during usual office hours toward the campaign of any other candidate
for office or for the nomination to any
office.42
(b) No public servant shall circulate an
initiative or referendum petition or solicit signatures on an initiative or
referendum petition in any public office of the state, county, or municipal
governments of Arkansas or while on duty for any state agency or any county or
municipal government in Arkansas.43
(c) No public servant shall use any office or
room furnished at public expense to distribute any letters, circulars, or other
campaign materials, unless such room is regularly used by members of the public
for such purposes without regard to political
affiliation.44
(d) No public servant shall use for campaign
purposes any item of personal property provided with public
funds.45
(e) No person shall assess any public
employee for any political purpose whatever or coerce by threats or otherwise
any public employee into making a subscription or contribution for any
political purpose.46
(f) No person shall place any campaign
banners, campaign signs, or other campaign literature on any cars, trucks,
tractors or other vehicles belonging to the State of Arkansas or any
municipality or county in the
state.47
§ 246
Interest-Bearing
Accounts
It shall be permissible for candidates to keep their campaign
funds in interest-bearing accounts such as a bank checking account, a money
market fund or a certificate of deposit. Candidates shall disclose the
interest-bearing account on their Campaign Contribution and Expenditure Reports
and report the interest earned as a contribution.
§ 247
Penalty Schedule for Failure
to File or Late Filing of Contribution & Expenditure Reports
(a) In addition to being sanctioned as
provided for in Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-218(b)(4),
candidates who fail to file or file untimely Contribution and Expenditure
Reports, other than the preelection report required by Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-207(a)(1)(C),
§
7-6-208(a)(1),
and §
7-6-209(a)(1),
as required by law, and referenced throughout these rules, shall be subject to
fines for the late filing of reports. Although fines are assessed on a
case-by-case basis, the following schedule serves as a guideline in determining
the amount of the fine:
Date Report Filed
|
First Time Delinquency
|
Repeated Delinquency by Same Candidate
|
1 to 10 days late
|
$ 25.00 per report
|
$ 50.00 per report
|
11 to 20 days late
|
$ 50.00 per report
|
$ 100.00 per report
|
21 to 30 days late
|
$ 100.00 per report
|
$ 200.00 per report
|
(b) In
addition to being sanctioned as provided for in Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-218(b)(4),
candidates who fail to file or file untimely the preelection Contribution and
Expenditure Reports, required by Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-207(a)(1)(C),
§
7-6-208(a)(1),
or §
7-6-209(a)(1),
shall be subject to fines for the late filing of reports. Although fines are
assessed on a case-by-case basis, the following schedule serves as a guideline
in determining the amount of the fine:
Date Report Filed
|
First Time Delinquency
|
Repeated Delinquency by Same Candidate
|
1 to 3 days late
|
$ 50.00 per report
|
$ 100.00 per report
|
4 to 10 days late
|
$ 100.00 per report
|
$ 150.00 per report
|
11 to 30 days late
|
$ 150.00 per report
|
$ 250.00 per report
|
(c) For
purposes of this rule, "repeated delinquency" shall refer to each different
time, during the entire election cycle, a candidate fails to file any
Contribution and Expenditure Report while running for office and until such
time as the final report has been filed.
(d) In addition to the fines and sanctions
discussed above, candidates who fail to file their Contribution and Expenditure
Reports will be ordered to file such reports within ten (10) days.
(e) A candidate who gives false or materially
misleading information on a Contribution and Expenditure Report or omits
information from that report as required herein may be assessed by the Arkansas
Ethics Commission a fine of not less than $25 or more than $1,000 for each
violation and may be issued a public letter of caution, warning or
reprimand.
§ 248
Statement of Financial Interest-Filing Required of Candidates
(a) Pursuant to Ark. Code Ann. §
21-8-701(a)(2),
any candidate for elective office, other than candidates for levee and drainage
districts, must file a Statement of Financial Interest.
(b) Candidates shall file the Statement of
Financial Interest within thirty (30) days after the deadline for filing for
office for which he or she seeks election.
(c) The Statement of Financial Interest shall
include the information sought by Ark. Code Ann. §
21-8-701(d).48
(d) The Statement of Financial Interest shall
be filed as follows:
(1) Candidates for state
or district office shall file with the Secretary of State;
(2) Candidates for county or township office
shall file with the county clerk;
(3) Candidates for municipal office shall
file with the city clerk or recorder; and
(4) Candidates for municipal judges or city
attorneys shall file with the city clerk of the municipality within which they
serve.49
(e) The Statement of Financial Interest shall
be deemed to be timely filed if it is:
(1)
Hand-delivered to the appropriate public official on or before the due
date;
(2) Mailed to the appropriate
public official, postage prepaid, bearing a postmark indicating that it was
received by the post office or common carrier on or before the date
due;
(3) Received via facsimile by
the appropriate public official on or before the due date, provided the
original is received by the public official within ten (10) days of the
transmission; or
(4) Received by
the appropriate public official in a readable electronic format which is
acceptable to the appropriate public official and approved by the Ethics
Commission.
§
249
Statement of Financial Interest-Filing Required of
Public Officials, Appointees and Employees
(a) Pursuant to Ark. Code Ann. §
21-8-701(a),
the following persons are required to file a Statement of Financial Interest in
addition to candidates for elective office:
A public official, as defined in Ark. Code Ann. §
21-8-402(16);
A municipal judge or city attorney, whether elected or
appointed;
Any agency head, department director, or division director of
state government;
Any public appointee to a state board or commission (who
possesses regulatory authority or is authorized to receive or disburse state or
federal funds);
All persons who are elected members of a school board or who are
candidates for a position on a school board;
All public and charter school superintendents;
All directors of educational cooperatives; and
Any person appointed to a municipal, county or regional (i)
planning board or commission, (ii) airport board or commission, (iii) water or
sewer board or commission, (iv) utility board or commission, or (v) civil
service commission.
If a person is included in one of these categories for any part
of a calendar year, then he or she must file a Statement of Financial Interest
covering that period of time regardless of whether he or she has left his or
her office or position as of the date the statement is due.
(b) Public officials, appointees or employees
shall file the Statement of Financial Interest no later than January 31 of each
year. As an exception to § 247 of these rules, incumbent officeholders who
filed the Statement of Financial Interest by January 31 of the year in which an
election is held shall not be required to file an additional Statement of
Financial Interest upon becoming a candidate for reelection or election to
another office at any election held during the
year.50
(c) All appointees appointed to state boards
or commissions after July 30, 1999, shall file a Statement of Financial
Interest covering the previous calendar year within thirty (30) days of
appointment. Any person hired, promoted, or selected as an agency head,
department director, or division director within state government after July
30, 1999, shall file a Statement of Financial Interest covering the previous
calendar year within thirty (30) days of filling such a
position.51
(d) The Statement of Financial Interest shall
include all the information required in Ark. Code Ann. §
21-8-701(d).52
(e) The Statement of Financial Interest shall
be filed as follows:
(1) State or district
public servants shall file with the Secretary of State;
(2) County, township or school district
public servants shall file with the county clerk;
(3) Municipal public servants shall file with
the city clerk or recorder;
(4)
Municipal judges or city attorneys shall file with the city clerk of the
municipality within which they serve; and
(5) Persons appointed to regional boards or
commissions shall file with the county clerk of the county where they
reside.53
(f) The Statement of Financial Interest shall
be deemed to be timely filed if it is:
(1)
Hand-delivered to the appropriate public official on or before the due
date;
(2) Mailed to the appropriate
public official, postage prepaid, bearing a postmark indicating that it was
received by the post office or common carrier on or before the date
due;
(3) Received via facsimile by
the appropriate public official on or before the due date, provided the
original is received by the public official within ten (10) days of the
transmission; or
(4) Received by
the appropriate public official in a readable electronic format which is
acceptable to the appropriate public official and approved by the Ethics
Commission.
§
250
Penalty Schedule for Failure to File or Late Filing of
Statements of Financial Interest
(a) In
addition to being sanctioned as provided for in Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-218(b)(4),
candidates and public servants who fail to file or file untimely the Statement
of Financial Interest as required by law, and referenced in § 247 of these
rules, shall be subject to fines for the late filing of statements. Although
fines are assessed on a case-by-case basis, the following serves as a guideline
in determining the amount of the fine:
Date Statement Filed
|
Amount of Fine
|
1 to 15 days late
|
$ 50.00
|
16 to 30 days late
|
$ 100.00
|
(b) A
public servant or candidate who gives false or materially misleading
information on a Statement of Financial Interest or omits information from the
Statement as required by Ark. Code Ann. §
21-8-701
et seq. may be assessed by the Arkansas Ethics Commission a
fine of not less than $25 or more than $1,000 for each violation and issued a
public letter of caution, warning or reprimand.
(c) In addition to the fines and sanctions
discussed above, candidates and public servants who fail to file their
Statement of Financial Interest will be ordered to file such reports within ten
(10) days.
§ 251
Exploratory Committees-Registration and Reporting
(a) An exploratory committee is a person who
receives contributions held to be transferred later to a single candidate. It
shall not include an organized political party as defined in Ark. Code Ann.
§
7-1-101(16)
or the candidate's own campaign
committee.54
(b) Exploratory committees must register with
the Secretary of State within fifteen (15) days after receiving contributions
during a calendar year which, in the aggregate, exceed $500. The committee must
also disclose the name, address and telephone numbers of the committee and its
officers as well as the name of the person who, upon becoming a candidate, is
intended to receive the contributions received by the
committee.55
(c) Within thirty (30) days of the end of
each month, an exploratory committee shall file a report with the Secretary of
State indicating the total amount of contributions received during the filing
period and/or the previous month and disclose the names and addresses of
persons contributing in excess of $50, along with the contributor's principal
place of business, employer, occupation, and the amount contributed, and the
total amount of expenditures made and, for each single expenditure which
exceeds one hundred dollars ($100), an itemization including the amount of the
expenditure, the name and address of the person to whom the expenditure was
made, and the date the expenditure was made.56 The
first report shall be filed for the month in which the committee files its
registration. A final report shall be filed within thirty (30) days after the
end of the month in which the committee either transfers the contributions
received to the candidate or no longer intends to accept contributions on
behalf of the candidate.57
§ 252
Exploratory
Committees-Contribution Limits
(a) An
exploratory committee is a person who receives contributions held to be
transferred later to a single candidate.58
Furthermore, an exploratory committee is one designated by a candidate to
promote the candidate's campaign and to serve as recipient of all contributions
and the distributor of all expenditures for a candidate prior to the time the
candidate formally announces his intentions to run for
office.59
(b) An exploratory committee is under the
same guidelines applicable to maximum contribution limits per election as the
candidate's campaign committee. Contributions to an exploratory committee count
toward the maximum limit a candidate may receive.
(c) Expenditures from exploratory committees
must be for campaign purposes. As with any other campaign funds, candidates or
their exploratory committees are prohibited from using any campaign funds,
including funds given to an exploratory committee, as personal income or for
personal purposes.
(d) An
exploratory committee may be formed on a candidate's behalf even if the
candidate is presently an officeholder and has an existing campaign fund. The
exploratory committee must not be formed for the same office as currently held
by the officeholder. The monies which make up the existing campaign fund relate
to a prior election. Funds contributed to an exploratory committee will apply
toward the contribution limits of the election for which the exploratory
committee was formed and are exclusive from funds already maintained in an
officeholder account.
(e) Funds
raised by the exploratory committee on the candidate's behalf will be treated
as contributions if the individual elects to become a candidate. The
contribution limits for the election/office being sought by the individual will
apply. The money contributed will apply against the limits applicable to the
primary election for the candidate when, and if, the person decides to run for
office.
(f) A potential candidate
may have more than one exploratory committee. If a potential candidate or
individual establishes more than one exploratory committee, or if the person
elects to run for an office other than the one for which the exploratory
committee was receiving contributions, the candidate must dispose of the funds
received by the exploratory committee for the office not sought pursuant to
§ 226 and/or Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-203(h)(1)(A)
-(D) within thirty (30) days of the close of filing for public
office.
(g) Exploratory committees
must maintain bank accounts separate from the candidate's personal account and
separate from any concurrent officeholder/candidate's account. When the
candidate announces for election, the exploratory committee may convert the
funds remaining in its account to the candidate's campaign account.
(h)
(1)
More than one exploratory committee for a potential candidate may exist
simultaneously which designates the same or different campaigns to be explored.
If the committees are for the same office (e.g., different
committees in different counties), the contributions received will be applied
toward the limitations for contributions as noted herein in subsection (e). The
committees should keep accurate and separate bank accounts and be able to
verify that no contributor has given more than the maximum in the aggregate to
any exploratory committees. As an example, if a person gives $1,000 to the
candidate's Pulaski County Exploratory Committee for Governor, such person
could not give any money to any other exploratory committee for the same
candidate, same office.
(2) If the
committees are for different offices, the candidate must ensure that the funds
retained by the committee for the office not sought are disposed pursuant to
§ 226 of these rules and Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-203(h)(1)(A)
-(D) and subsection (f) above.
(i)
(1) If
the candidate ultimately seeks the office being explored, the funds raised by
the exploratory committee should be transferred to the candidate's campaign
committee and reported in the final report pursuant to § 251 of these
rules and Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-216.
The amount(s) a person contributes to an exploratory committee shall count
towards the limit on campaign contributions which such person may make to the
candidate.
(2) If the candidate
seeks another office, the committee should file a final report, note this fact
on the report, and dispose of the funds pursuant to § 226 of these rules
and Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-203(h)(1)(A)
-(D).
(3) If the person elects not
to seek office, the committee must file a final report and note this fact on
the report. Since the person is not going to be a candidate, any funds
remaining in the exploratory committee's account should be disposed pursuant to
§ 226 of these rules and Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-203(h)(1)(A)
-(D). Within thirty (30) days after the end of the month in which the candidate
decides not to run for office or the committee no longer intends to accept
contributions on his or her behalf, the committee must file its final report
and note how any remaining funds were disposed of by the committee. The funds
should be disposed pursuant to one of the four options in §
7-6-203(h)(1).
The Commission encourages exploratory committees to consider refunding the
contributions on a
pro rata basis to the contributors. The
funds must not be used by the candidate for personal purposes.
1 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-201(2).
2 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-201(4)(A).
3 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-201(3).
4 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-201(6).
5 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-201(7).
6 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-201(8).
7 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-201(9).
8 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-201(12).
9 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-1-101(16).
10 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-201(13).
11 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-201(14).
12 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-201(15).
13 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-201(16).
14 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-203(e).
15 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-205(a).
16 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-205(b).
17 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-205(c).
18 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-205(d).
19 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-205(e).
20 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-203(a)
-(d).
21 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-204(a).
22 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-204.
23 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-204(b).
24
See definition of
"in-kind contribution" in § 200(j).
25 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-203(f).
26 Arkansas Ethics Commission Opinion
No. 96-EC-005.
27 This exemption does not cover the
cost of mailing invitations, only the cost of printing invitations.
28 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-203(i)(1).
29 Arkansas Ethics Commission Opinion
No. 97-EC-001.
30 Arkansas Ethics Commission Opinion
No. 97-EC-005(B).
31 Arkansas Ethics Commission Opinion
No. 97-EC-005(A).
32 Arkansas Ethics Commission Opinion
No. 97-EC-002.
33 Arkansas Ethics Commission Opinion
No. 92-EC-020.
34 For the definition of fair market
value, see § 200(h) supra.
35 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-201(16)(B).
36 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-203(h)(3)(D).
37 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-203(h)(3)(B).
38 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-214.
39 Arkansas Ethics Commission Opinion
No. 92-EC-004.
40 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-210.
41 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-213.
42 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-1-103(a)(2)(A).
43 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-1-103(a)(2)(B).
44 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-1-103(a)(3).
45 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-1-103(a)(3).
46 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-1-103(a)(4).
47 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-1-103(a)(6).
48 Subsections (a)-(c) are taken
directly from Ark. Code Ann. §
21-8-701.
See also Arkansas Ethics Commission Opinion No. 97-EC-014,
which discusses debts arising out of the ordinary course of business.
49 Ark. Code Ann. §
21-8-703.
50 Ark. Code Ann. §
21-8-701(c)(2).
51 Act 553 of 1999, codified at Ark.
Code Ann §
21-8-701(c)(1).
52 Subsections (a) - (c) are derived
directly from Ark. Code Ann. §
21-8-701.
See also Arkansas Ethics Commission Opinion No. 97-EC-014,
which discusses debts arising out of the ordinary course of business.
53 Ark. Code Ann. §
21-8-703.
54 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-201(8).
55 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-216(a)
and (b).
56 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-207(b)(1)(B)
requires itemization of all contributions to campaign committees in excess of
$50.00. See Arkansas Ethics Commission Opinion No.
97-EC-007.
57 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-216(c).
58 Ark. Code Ann. §
7-6-201(8).
59 Arkansas Ethics Commission Opinion
No. 97-EC-007.