Tax dollars go to dry cleaning, arts for state lawmakers

OLYMPIA, Wash. (AP) - A few days after Washington lawmakers approved a budget deal to lower state spending last year, small-government Rep. Gary Alexander got $40.60 worth of dry cleaning done.
Then he made sure taxpayers paid the bill.
Alexander, the Republican budget writer in the state House, billed more than $500 worth of dry-cleaning fees to the state over the past two years, according to an Associated Press analysis of thousands of expense reimbursements. He wasn't alone: Seven Democrats and 12 Republicans in the Legislature requested and received compensation totaling more than $5,600 for dry cleaning since the start of 2011.
Lawmakers are able to get taxpayer-covered compensation for what the Legislature deems legitimate business expenses tied to the job. That includes common costs of being a lawmaker, such as travel around the district to meet with constituents, parking fees for meetings, office supplies and rent for district offices.
It also includes a variety of expenses with less-explicit benefits for taxpayers, including iPhones, picture frames, artwork, expenses for meetings with lobbyists and dues to professional organizations like the conservative American Legislative Exchange Council.
Alexander said he only submits dry cleaning receipts that are above and beyond the expenses he has outside of his legislative work. He said the job, especially when the Legislature is meeting, requires him to use a lot more dress shirts and sport coats.
"I don't think that's an unreasonable expense to be reimbursed for," Alexander said.
After an AP reporter questioned him about how it aligns with a limited-government message, Alexander said he would explore ways to keep his expenses down.
"I'm always looking for ways that we can do it by example," said Alexander, who is from Olympia.
Stephen Ellis, vice president of the group Taxpayers for Common Sense, said the idea that lawmakers should spend public money to decorate their office or keep their clothes clean is beyond the pale. He said that while the amount of money may be small in comparison to the budget at large, the expenses offer a chance for taxpayers to get a glimpse at how lawmakers operate.
"We see it as a lens into how they approach the budget," Ellis said. "If they're profligate with their own spending in offices, it stands to reason that they're not going to be too frugal with the state or the federal budget."
Democratic Sen. Rodney Tom, who lives in the wealthy enclave of Medina and recently built a coalition with Republicans to install himself as majority leader, purchased various books from Amazon.com and got reimbursement for a Bose headset that cost $164.20. Senate Democratic Leader Ed Murray got coverage for his home Internet ($50 per month) and telephone ($50 per month), in addition to the cellphone that he and many other lawmakers expense.
House Republican Leader Richard DeBolt, of Chehalis, meanwhile, filed for only about $100 in total expenses over two years - all tied to travel. House Speaker Frank Chopp, D-Seattle, used his account mostly to expense costs related to his district office.
Rep. Larry Haler, R-Richland, expensed more than $600 in membership dues for business organizations in the Tri Cities. Rep. Jamie Pedersen, D-Seattle, purchased $383.25 in artwork for his office in March of last year, also when lawmakers were struggling to balance the budget.
Pederson said the art - a painting of the Montlake Bridge done by a Seattle artist - was like other furniture that lawmakers need to make their offices comfortable and inviting. He noted that he doesn't typically use his full allotment for reimbursable expenses, which has been $6,500 in recent years.
Murray, the top Democrat in the state Senate, said he uses his own money to cover a number of expenses related to his legislative work. He bemoaned the focus on reimbursements.
"It's why we have trouble recruiting candidates who aren't rich, old and retired," said Murray, who is from Seattle.
Haler said he wouldn't be part of the business organization if it wasn't for his work in the Legislature. Tom said his expenses were all important to his legislative work, such as books on policy and a headset for phone conversations.
Each lawmaker typically totals between $10,000 and $25,000 in expenses each year, including per diems during the session, postage, printing, travel and the more generic category of office expenses. Legislators earn a salary of between about $42,000 and $50,000, and many maintain external jobs.
Washington lawmakers are currently looking to fill a roughly $1 billion shortfall and looking to add another $1 billion to education in the coming legislative session.
Then he made sure taxpayers paid the bill.
Alexander, the Republican budget writer in the state House, billed more than $500 worth of dry-cleaning fees to the state over the past two years, according to an Associated Press analysis of thousands of expense reimbursements. He wasn't alone: Seven Democrats and 12 Republicans in the Legislature requested and received compensation totaling more than $5,600 for dry cleaning since the start of 2011.
Lawmakers are able to get taxpayer-covered compensation for what the Legislature deems legitimate business expenses tied to the job. That includes common costs of being a lawmaker, such as travel around the district to meet with constituents, parking fees for meetings, office supplies and rent for district offices.
It also includes a variety of expenses with less-explicit benefits for taxpayers, including iPhones, picture frames, artwork, expenses for meetings with lobbyists and dues to professional organizations like the conservative American Legislative Exchange Council.
Alexander said he only submits dry cleaning receipts that are above and beyond the expenses he has outside of his legislative work. He said the job, especially when the Legislature is meeting, requires him to use a lot more dress shirts and sport coats.
"I don't think that's an unreasonable expense to be reimbursed for," Alexander said.
After an AP reporter questioned him about how it aligns with a limited-government message, Alexander said he would explore ways to keep his expenses down.
"I'm always looking for ways that we can do it by example," said Alexander, who is from Olympia.
Stephen Ellis, vice president of the group Taxpayers for Common Sense, said the idea that lawmakers should spend public money to decorate their office or keep their clothes clean is beyond the pale. He said that while the amount of money may be small in comparison to the budget at large, the expenses offer a chance for taxpayers to get a glimpse at how lawmakers operate.
"We see it as a lens into how they approach the budget," Ellis said. "If they're profligate with their own spending in offices, it stands to reason that they're not going to be too frugal with the state or the federal budget."
Democratic Sen. Rodney Tom, who lives in the wealthy enclave of Medina and recently built a coalition with Republicans to install himself as majority leader, purchased various books from Amazon.com and got reimbursement for a Bose headset that cost $164.20. Senate Democratic Leader Ed Murray got coverage for his home Internet ($50 per month) and telephone ($50 per month), in addition to the cellphone that he and many other lawmakers expense.
House Republican Leader Richard DeBolt, of Chehalis, meanwhile, filed for only about $100 in total expenses over two years - all tied to travel. House Speaker Frank Chopp, D-Seattle, used his account mostly to expense costs related to his district office.
Rep. Larry Haler, R-Richland, expensed more than $600 in membership dues for business organizations in the Tri Cities. Rep. Jamie Pedersen, D-Seattle, purchased $383.25 in artwork for his office in March of last year, also when lawmakers were struggling to balance the budget.
Pederson said the art - a painting of the Montlake Bridge done by a Seattle artist - was like other furniture that lawmakers need to make their offices comfortable and inviting. He noted that he doesn't typically use his full allotment for reimbursable expenses, which has been $6,500 in recent years.
Murray, the top Democrat in the state Senate, said he uses his own money to cover a number of expenses related to his legislative work. He bemoaned the focus on reimbursements.
"It's why we have trouble recruiting candidates who aren't rich, old and retired," said Murray, who is from Seattle.
Haler said he wouldn't be part of the business organization if it wasn't for his work in the Legislature. Tom said his expenses were all important to his legislative work, such as books on policy and a headset for phone conversations.
Each lawmaker typically totals between $10,000 and $25,000 in expenses each year, including per diems during the session, postage, printing, travel and the more generic category of office expenses. Legislators earn a salary of between about $42,000 and $50,000, and many maintain external jobs.
Washington lawmakers are currently looking to fill a roughly $1 billion shortfall and looking to add another $1 billion to education in the coming legislative session.
Bull Pucky. Pure fookin Bull Pucky
do they realy need to wear suits why not just every day clean clothes
The IRS does not deem my work suits, blouses, stockings etc., or the dry cleaning of such items to be tax deductible. Â Perhaps legislators should only be allowed to expense items that the IRS deems deductible : ) I want my pedicures ...sun glasses...the art in my office...OH WAIT....SHOES!!! Â I want the IRS to allow me to expense my shoes!!! Â : )
They should not be reimbursed for dry cleaning or art. Maintaining an office in their home district should be paid for but ONLY resonable expenses. These lawmakers should have to put the expenses on their federal tax returns under unreimbursed business expenses limited to 2% of income. Under federal law dry cleaning is not a business expense. If construction workers can't deduct laundry neither should the legislator who represents them.
Two words.....orange jumpsuit.
 @Mark DuPriest Dang! That's the best idea yet!
Strict requirements should be set in place regarding what is a valid reimbursement and what is not. Someone should be in charge of AUTHORIZING these expenditures PRIOR to the money being spent or if the expense doesn't fall within the requirements then they don't get reimbursed, period.
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ENOUGH WITH THIS WASTEFUL ATTITUDE!
Yeah, this is what we mean when we say cut the damn reckless spending! Wake up WA voters! These are the idiots you keep voting in!
 @Zoso Seven Democrats and twelve Republicans... it doesn't sound like it matters which "idiots" we vote in, they are all just waiting to take advantage of the perks of their position.
Each lawmaker typically totals between $10,000 and $25,000 in expenses each year, including per diems during the session, postage, printing, travel and the more generic category of office expenses.Â
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And we wonder why we can't balance our budget???Â
thanks so much Gary Alexander, for giving me something to take my mind off other troubles. in the next session, please don't tell me the state does not have enough money, I'll only laugh at you.
Your personal laundry is not a LEGIT tax payer expense that we should be paying for! You want to look pretty pay for your own dam laundry you tool! | Meetings with lobbyists... yeah they pay for your stuff already stop double dipping... Art WORK... WTF you are a government official your artwork in the office is no concern of ours! | If you want a office outside of the one in OLYMPIA again YOUR DIME! | Keep digging Komo because if you ask me any DEFICIT in a budget should = loss of pension - benefits - whatever else these bozo's get for free... if they want all the perks they need to operate in the BLACK not the RED!
These expenditures are only the tip of the iceberg. I would be willing to bet there are a lot of things they spend taxpayer money on that never gets told to the public. They give themselves these benefits in the first place. It's up to them, why wouldn't they.
Why is it that politicians always seem to think the taxpayers owe them something above and beyond their salary? These are hard times. There is no excuse for lawmakers getting these kinds of perks that people in the private sector don't get. Who do these people think they are? Dem, Rep, it doesn't matter. Start walking the talk!
Between $10K and 25K PER lawmaker in "expenses" each year, no WONDER our state is broke. These people are sticking us with lunch tabs bigger than some people's annual incomes. Of course, they find ways to justify it s othey can sleep at night, so it's all good. Right?
The first question that I have is how much do these state reps and senators make per year? Â I don't know how much it is. Â I don't even know how many hours they work per year. I think their working hours are less than most full time jobs. Â I guess they work a lot in a short period of time, and then are off for a while. I guess if they make a lot it seems greedy. Â Â The article said, "...Seven Democrats and 12 Republicans in the Legislature requested and received compensation totaling more than $5,600 for dry cleaning since the start of 2011." Â It is mostly Republicans that rant government is too big, and that we need to cut outlays or expenses, and cutting the taxes for the rich from 1980 until 2012 has nothing to do with government deficits. Â I find it hypocritical of these 12 Republicans to require the government to pay for their dry cleaning bills, or don't try to save the taxpayers money when they can. Â I don't think that $5,600 is very much dry cleaning for 17 Democrats and Republicans over a two year period, and it is required to do their job. Â The amount of time to launder their own suits is very time consuming, and would take time away from more important job matters. Â I also think cell phones and the Internet help senators and reps doe their job more efficiently, easier, and cheaper. Â Â Â
My firefighter dad has to dish out for his formal blues and cleaning them, why the eff is this being reimbursed?!?!
 @WAbornnraised I think police and firefighters should get reimbursed since it is a requirement of their job.  I think their jobs are important enough to society that they should not have to pay or do this themselves.Â
@CityDude @WAbornnraised Everyone in the military is required to wear uniforms so why shouldn't they be reembursed. Part of doing your job is dressing accordingly. These people have given themselves these privilages. If they can't afford to keep their clothes in good condition for the job then perhaps they shouldn't do the job.
"I don't think that's an unreasonable expense to be reimbursed for," Alexander said.
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I do.
Just introduced in the State Senate:
SB5248: AN ACT Relating to creating a tax on plastic shopping bags.
Sponsors: Sen. Maralyn Chase, Edmonds, D
Sen. Adam Kline, Seattle, D
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What the heck? How can membership fees for the American Legislative Exchange Council possibly be considered a public expense?
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Even though the actual effects of ALEC-sponsored legislation are far more costly to our society, this still bothers me.
I wonder if he is getting taxpayer-covered compensation,  AND using the amount for a deduction on his federal income tax
Paging Tim Eyeman....
An initiative of the people to limit reimbursement to elected and appointed public officials.
@Rider And while you are at it throw in some term limits.
 @Rider God, don't get eyeman involved. We'll wind up paying even more on car tabs.
 @John Meadows There was a bill posted to the I-960 list that would increase vehicle registration fees. Eyeman didn't do it.
How many people get to have the State(people) pay for their work clothes?Â
Come on... really. $5K is the squabble. And if I sent an employee on a trip for a period of time, yes, I would probably allow them to send a suit to the cleaners. Really, I know this stuff adds up and we all need to review our "little" stuff... but this story amounts to nothing. And I agree, it is a pathetic day for the news.
IF they go on a trip then they get per diem which is suppose to cover personal expenses.  While in Olympia their personal bills, including but not limited to food, laundry, dry cleaning are their responsibility.  A little here and a little there adds up to a big. Â
 @KLP $5,000 * 400 = $2,000,000 not so little when it scales
 @Rider  @KLP Where do you get 400? There are 98 house members and 49 senators in Washington state. That's 147 * $5000 = $735,00 not 2 million.
AND THE BEATÂ GOES ON
Slow news day at KOMO, I see. Good grief.Â
if the state is paying for the head phones does the state get to keep them when he leaves
 @billibob The answer is yes. Technically they are property of the state.
@billibob Technically yes. All purchases such as this would/should be logged and returned to the appropriate department upon his departure or he can choose to buy them at current value if its an option.
I'm shocked, SHOCKED, to find that corruption and waste is going on there </Captain Renault>
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For the people, by the people. Who's people? Whether it's a D or an R this tells us a lot about just who the elite think they are. The regime in DC wants to spend 25% of the GDP. The more government takes/spends, the less we all have in our pockets. Of course unless they merely print more. Worse yet.
....I'll just file it away in the "nothing can surprise me anymore about our legislators"Â drawer.
I have a problem with this. Their not full time and not entitled to have tax payers pay their  laundry  bill.Â
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This is a tax write off if they choose to itemize. The other expenses should reflect on their web sites. Show the tax payers what they are spending.
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 "Seven Democrats and 12 Republicans in the Legislature requested and received compensation totaling more than $5,600 for dry cleaning since the start of 2011."
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I feel, that if a rep reflex this spending on his/her web page, the practice may stop.
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 @snoopy84 Let's do the math. $5600 divided between 19 people, over the course of 24 months... $12.28 per month per person. That's a reasonable bill.
Not news. This is no different than expenses for any business. It's unfair to expect any individual to subsidize everything on their own dime when conducting business, which is what they do. Apparently some people would be just dandy if a senator wore the latest WWE T-shirt, used a large cable spool for a conference table, and had a beer bottle-cap portrait of Jesus on their wall.
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None of this is outrageous at all. Get over it.
 @mhungry Artwork? Really? That's justified? BS. I can see office expenses, some travel. But  to help pay for entertaining freaking LOBBYISTS? ARE YOU KIDDING ME? They shouldn't be allowed within 10,000 feet of legislatures in the first place.
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 @John Meadows The art in their office isn't just for lobbyists. It's for anyone who visits their representative to enjoy. Including yourself if you bother to take the time to make an appointment and meet with them. I'd imagine you'd be pretty bored working in an office with bare walls. Artwork is pretty under-appreciated. You don't necessarily realize it until there is none. Take away all the photos, posters, art, etc in your doctor's office, dentists', workplace, everywhere and it'd be a pretty boring world to live in. It's not like they're buying a Picasso here.
@mhungry @John Meadows I can see that senerio as being a problem if you plan to spend lots of time there, but for 25 to 30 minutes you'd probably be able to mange the inconvenience of having something to look at.
 @mhungry I work in dirty, dusty environments. I have to pay for my own laundry. I am required to have reflective safety vest, hard hat and steel toed work boots. I had to buy those out of my own pocket. I don't make enough to use the long form so I can itemize these as deductions for work, so I eat the expense.
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What makes these bozos think I should have to pay for their dry cleaning too?
 @Glassman  @mhungry You're getting scr*wed over glassman. Required safety equipment is required by law to be provided by your employer.
 @Glassman  @mhungry Sounds like you are getting a bad deal Glassman.  I sure as hell wouldn't put up with that. Â
 @mhungry It must be nice to get one's employer to pay one's laundry bill.  I have never had such luxury.  Granted, I've only been in the workforce for 40 years...
 @Tim Lane The expenses discussed are generally non-everyday expenses. e.g. the lawmaker is out of town on a trip. Those are always billable expenses.
that's what per diem is for
 @mhungry Try submitting dry-clieaning to the IRS as a deductible business expense. Let me guess, you support Alexander, so he can do no wrong.
 @strangel00p Actually it can be a deductible business expense with the IRS. it depends on the situation.
 @mhungry I believe that's only the case when your employer requires you to wear a special uniform (think firefighter, cop, disaster clean-up). A business suit is not special/particular to the job.
 @mhungry I disagree. I work for a large company and we all pay our own dry-cleaning bills - we don't get reimbursed by the company. If part of your job is to dress professionally, then it is up to you to buy the clothes and keep them clean.
 @tats76  @mhungry Tats76: If you don't get paid a lot, and pay for your own dry cleaning you are getting screwed. Â
 @CityDude  @tats76  @mhungry Wait a minute.... who made the choice to be in politics?
 @tats76 For everyday cleaning, sure. That's a normal, non-billable charge. But for trips and other events where you don't have access to your normal routine of clothing or cleaner, it's billable.
@TP @mhungry @tats76 My husband's dress blues were "dry clean ONLY" and they were part of his sea bag that he took where ever in the world he went. We purchased them and WE maintained them.
 @Jatok  @mhungry  @tats76 Fatigues are not "dry clean only" and you learn in boot camp how to press your uniform.
@mhungry @tats76 What about your military personnel? They are required to keep their dress uniforms in tip top shape no matter where in the world they are and most of them aren't gone for just a day or two from their normal routine. They also work for the government.
@mhungry trip expenses come under per diem.  Other government employees don't get to be reimbursed for that kind of expense.Â