Tuesday, December 20, 2016

52 Oakland City Councilmembers - helping themselves to $250k worth of free Warriors Tickets

October 2016
Warriors tickets: Which East Bay politicians claimed more than $250,000 worth of free seats?

Elected officials and top administrators at the city of Oakland, Alameda County and the Oakland Alameda County Coliseum Authority that runs publicly owned Oracle Arena are entitled to use three luxury suites for Warriors games. And as the team’s popularity has grown, so have the questions about how officials are using benefiting from complimentary seats for the hottest ticket in sports.

A Bay Area News Group examination of three seasons of records found seven public officials have claimed tickets for themselves worth more than $250,000 as the Warriors rewrote the record books.


Larry Reid, Oakland city council/coliseum authority — 356 tickets; $374,420

Christopher Dobbins, coliseum authority — 320 tickets; $342,840

Lynette Gibson-McElhaney, Oakland city council — 163 tickets; $325,190

Yui Hay Lee, coliseum authority — 228 tickets; $315,800

Barbara Parker, Oakland city attorney — 230 tickets; $313,660

Susan Muranishi, Alameda County administrator — 180 tickets; $286,500

Scott McKibben, coliseum authority executive director — 85 tickets; $255,800 



http://www.eastbaytimes.com/2016/10/21/warriors-tickets-which-east-bay-politicians-claimed-more-than-250000-worth-of-free-seats/


November 2016
Oakland: Ethics panel probes free Warriors tickets for City Council

Public Ethics Commission at a hearing Wednesday offered strong criticism of the city’s use of free tickets to Golden State Warriors games and other events at Oracle Arena and the Coliseum.

The city has free use of a luxury suite at the arena through its lease with the Warriors. Alameda County and the city-county authority that runs the Coliseum complex also each have their own suite. The city and the county own the complex.

Under the policy, politicians or city staff must list a purpose for attending the events. Most often, the stated purpose is reviewing or inspecting the facilities, but some ethics commissioners said there is little proof that work is being done during games.

“These people certified on their behalf that they were going to oversee the facility when in fact they were going to enjoy the game,” said ethics Commissioner Stephen Shefler, who called the policy “bankrupt.”

For instance, Santa Clara officials do not take any free tickets to events at Levi’s Stadium. In Sacramento, the city has hired a person to oversee who gets tickets to the new Golden 1 Center, home of the Sacramento Kings.

Speers recommended Oakland designate someone to oversee who gets the free tickets.

“From an ethics standpoint the end goal of any policy is avoiding the perception that decision making is influenced by the availability of the tickets,” Speers told the commission.

An investigation by this newspaper last month found City Council members and top officials hoarded tickets for themselves and sometimes doled them out to cronies and campaign contributors.

Under the state ethics law, the Fair Political Practices Act, officials may use the tickets themselves or give away tickets to games if there is a clearly stated public purpose to justify it. But it often does not work that way.

Council member Larry Reid took 356 tickets, always in pairs of two, over the Warriors’ past three seasons through the joint authority, which he chairs, almost always listing the public purpose as inspecting the arena’s operations. But when asked about those tickets, Reid said he rarely attends games and gives the tickets to his children and friends.

There is no public record of who actually used those tickets.

Council member Abel Guillen gave tickets to people who contributed to and volunteered for his campaign, calling them community volunteers who deserved rewards for their efforts.

Council member Noel Gallo said he and others are given an envelope “with a bunch of tickets” to do with as they wish. Like Reid, Gallo submitted disclosure forms to the city claiming his public purpose was to oversee the area, but said he really gave the tickets away.

http://www.mercurynews.com/2016/11/30/oakland-free-warriors-tickets-for-city-council-to-probed-by-ethics-panel-tonight/