Posted by
Kayla on
Tuesday, May 5, 2009
This morning at 10am, Pittsburgh City Council will make a historic vote that will forever change our system of campaign finance, and the way that contracts are awarded in the City of Pittsburgh.
These 5 bills are the largest reform initiative taken since the adoption of the Home Rule Charter in Pittsburgh. Â These reform bills will:
- Cap contributions by individuals at $2,000 for Mayoral and City Controller Races, and $1,000 for City Council races
- Mandate the creation of an online, searchable database of all campaign contributions and city contracts
- Ban all no-bid contracts over $30,000
- Create the Lobbyist Disclosure Act, which would require all lobbyists to register annually with the city
- Create the Lobbyist Registration Act, which would require all contract bidders to disclose any payments to lobbyists and consultants
- Strengthen the city’s ethics code to greatly limit gifts to government officials
Thank you to everyone that spoke out for reform and lobbied City Council – we could not have done this without you.
Posted by
Kayla on
Monday, April 27, 2009
The reformation comes to the City of Pittsburgh this week, as City Council prepares to vote this Wednesday on Councilman Bill Peduto’s reform package.
This package will end “pay-to-play” politics in our city through several different reforms to our current system. Â If passed on Wednesday, this package will:
- Cap contributions by individuals at $2,000 for Mayoral and City Controller Races, and $1,000 for City Council races
- Mandate the creation of an online, searchable database of all campaign contributions and city contracts
- Ban all no-bid contracts over $30,000
- Create the Lobbyist Disclosure Act, which would require all lobbyists to register annually with the city
- Create the Lobbyist Registration Act, which would require all contract bidders to disclose any payments to lobbyists and consultants
- Strengthen the city’s ethics code to greatly limit gifts to government officials
Now we need you to speak out for true reform for your city!  Click here to tell your  City Council representative that you support clean government reforms!
Now is your chance to speak up to clean up City Hall!
Posted by
Kayla on
Tuesday, April 21, 2009
Yesterday, Councilman Bill Peduto held a press conference to present his plan for a clean government for the City of Pittsburgh. Â He presented several proposals, all with the goal of bringing an end to “Pay-to-Play” politics in our City.
These reforms include an amendment to lower the contribution limits in Mayor Ravenstahl’s proposed campaign finance reform legislation, and would cap contributions by individuals at $2,000 for Mayoral and City Controller races, and $1,000 for City Council races.  They would also mandate the creation of an online, searchable database of all campaign contributions and all city contracts, and would put an end to all no-bid city contracts over $30,000.  Lobbyists would be required to register annually with the City, and  contract bidders would be required to disclose any payments to consultants and lobbyists.
To learn more, read the proposed package for clean government here:
Reform Bills Summary
Lobbyist Disclosure Act
Lobbyist Registration Act
Eliminating No-Bid Contracts
Campaign Finance Reform Ammendments
What others are saying about Bill’s proposal to clean up City government:
Posted by
Bill on
Monday, April 20, 2009
Today I will introduce a package of bills aimed at reforming government in Pittsburgh and ending “pay-to-play” politics. Â The legislation includes:
  
- Campaign Finance Reform legislation that sets donation limits per election.
- The creation of an online, searchable database of all campaign contributions and contracts.
- The elimination of no-bid contracts.
- The Lobbyist Registration Act, which will require the annual registration of all lobbyists in Pittsburgh.
- The Lobbyist Disclosure Act, which will require all RFP responses to disclose all finders fees and payments to lobbyists.
For too long, Pittsburgh has operated under a “pay-to-play” system. Â Today is just the first step to bring transparency, fairness, and financial responsibility to City government.