Caucus hears proposal to raise small-aggregation threshold to $200; sponsor absent, questions linger
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Rhonda summarized SB 1006 to let political committees aggregate contributions under $200 (current law: $100). Members questioned why $200 was chosen, how it would affect disclosure, and whether clean-election candidates would be affected; the sponsor did not testify in committee, the presenter said.
A presenter identified by the Chair as Rhonda told caucus members that SB 1,006 would allow political committees to report the aggregate amount of contributions under $200 for an election cycle; current law allows aggregation for amounts under $100. The presenter said the sponsor did not testify in committee and that staff did not have a definitive explanation for why $200 was selected; there was speculation that inflation was a rationale.
Rhonda told members the practical effect would be that political committees could accept two donations of $199 without disclosing the donor’s name and employer. Members asked whether the change would affect candidates participating in the public financing (Clean Elections) program; Rhonda said the bill would not affect Clean Elections candidates’ reporting rules.
Members asked follow-up questions about how the threshold had changed historically; Rhonda said the threshold had been increased from $25 to $100 about five years ago and that this is the first time at the $200 amount. The transcript does not record a sponsor’s explanation in the public caucus; a member asked additional policy questions and the session moved on.
No vote or amendment on SB 1,006 was recorded in the public portion of the caucus.
