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Free drinks and food easy to find for legislators

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Posted 8:36AM on Monday 18th March 2002 ( 23 years ago )
ATLANTA - Thousands of oysters and 320 pounds of shrimp helped Savannah businessmen run up a $42,000 tab wooing state lawmakers in January, kicking off the three-month schmoozefest that occurs at the Legislature every year. <br> <br> Lobbyists spend the session wining and dining legislators in hopes of getting a friendly ear for bills they want passed. The reports for January, released last week, show they spent more than $176,400. <br> <br> The Savannah Area Chamber of Commerce reported the highest lobbying bill that month for its seafood dinner, considered a social highlight of the session. <br> <br> Many cities in Georgia host receptions where the state&#39;s elite enjoy free alcohol and food, often barbecue or another local dish. The dinners give local politicians or businessmen a chance to rub elbows with the people who decide what laws get passed and who gets state funding in the budget. <br> <br> Savannah Chamber CEO Bill Hubbard said the expense on food and drink is necessary to draw lawmakers and influential state officials. <br> <br> ``It&#39;s a social environment, but our people are very well prepared to discuss our business priorities,&#39;&#39; he said. <br> <br> The buffets also allow city officials to descend on Atlanta all at once and pitch why they think their priorities should become law. <br> <br> ``If you don&#39;t see people from an area and don&#39;t talk to &#39;em, how do you know anything about them?&#39;&#39; said Anne Mueller, a longtime Republican representative from Savannah. <br> <br> Not that the receptions always do any good beyond showing city pride. Mueller pointed to a park renovation project for which Savannah hoped to receive $8.5 million this year, not the $25,000 or so it appears is on the way from the state. <br> <br> ``To say that if you put big money in, you get big bucks out, that&#39;s just not true. This year we didn&#39;t get a hill of beans out of it in the budget,&#39;&#39; Mueller said. <br> <br> Not all believe lobbying is quite so benign. Sen. Vincent Fort, D-Atlanta, has been railing against predatory lending for years and blames banking industry lobbyists for the fact that his bills have not yet passed. <br> <br> ``Corporations and large businesses that have the resources to lobby have the upper hand,&#39;&#39; he said. <br> <br> The Georgia Bankers Association spent $9,176.23 in January on receptions and dinners for lawmakers. The Community Bankers Association of Georgia also spent several thousand dollars. <br> <br> ``The wealthy and the powerful use those receptions for their own material profits and to influence the system,&#39;&#39; Fort said. ``Until we have a system where the wealthy cannot have influence out of proportion to their numbers, then it&#39;s all dependent on money. And the needs and wants of regular folks go unheeded.&#39;&#39; <br> <br> The president of the Georgia Banking Association conceded that fancy dinners are used to draw legislators for talks on policy and the bankers&#39; point of view. <br> <br> But Joe Brannen said it&#39;s easy to blame lobbyists when something doesn&#39;t go as planned, when in fact lawmakers vote to please their constituents, not big business. <br> <br> ``If I were in their position, I&#39;d probably say that, too. But the reason their bills aren&#39;t going anywhere is that there are problems in the bills,&#39;&#39; Brannen said. <br> <br> Sometimes lawmakers are feted individually or in small groups. Dinners, tickets to sporting events, even flower deliveries were listed on the January report. <br> <br> Rep. Pam Stanley, D-Atlanta, had the priciest personal gifts that month, accepting a $300 dinner and Atlanta Hawks tickets worth $260, all from Georgia Power Co. <br> <br> Sen. Charles Walker, D-Augusta, also took hundreds in gifts that month, including a $136 golf outing courtesy of a hospital group. Walker&#39;s total take was valued at $427.97 for January. <br> <br> <br> <br> On the Net: <br> <br> Read the lobbyist disclosures: http://www.ethics.state.ga.us <br> <br>

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