You are a member of the General Court, and your wife is a full-time employee within state agency ABC. Your wife and cousin (who is not a state employee) are planning to form a partnership in a travel agency and would be interested in making travel arrangements for state employees. You state that you would not be an officer in the business or have any ownership interest or be involved in the control or management of the business.
1: What restrictions would G. L. c. 268A place on your legislative activities should your wife commence the travel business?
2: What restrictions would G. L. c. 268A place on your wife should she commence the travel business?
You and your wife will be subject to the restrictions set forth below.
Restrictions On Your Activities
As a member of the General Court, you are a state employee within the meaning of G. L. c. 268A, §1 (q), and therefore are subject to the restrictions of G. L. c. 268A. The two provisions most relevant to your situation are §§6 and 23. Section 6, in pertinent part, prohibits you from participating1/ as a legislator in any particular matter2/ in which either you or a member of your immediate family has a financial interest. To the extent that your wife would have a financial interest in pending legislation affecting the travel industry, the §6 prohibition on your participation turns on whether the legislation is general or special. Proposed laws which are temporary, which do not amend the General Laws, or which would apply to a particular individual or business are examples of special legislation. See, Sands, 2 Sutherland Statutory Construction §40.01 etseq. (4th ed., 1973);EC-COI-82-169.3/ In the event that a piece of special legislation affecting your wife's financial interest were to come before you, you would be required to refrain from any participation in that matter and to file with the Commission a statement disclosing "the nature and circumstances of the particular matter, and make full disclosure of such financial interest…” G. L. c. 268A, §6. Section 23 establishes standards of conduct which apply to all public employees as well as to members of the General Court. Under §23, you may not use your official position to secure unwarranted privileges for yourself or others. You should be aware of this section whenever you discuss the availability of your wife's travel business to individuals or entities which appear before you in your legislative capacity.4/
Restrictions On Your Wife's Activities
As a full-time ABC employee, your wife is also a state employee within the meaning of G. L. c. 268A, §1(q). Under §7, she is prohibited from having a financial interest in a state contract unless she qualifies for a statutory exemption. The scope of the §7 prohibition would include all travel arrangements which she would make with state agencies as well as with state employees whose work-related travel expenses will be reimbursed by their state agencies, because her commissions would constitute a financial interest in contracts made by state agencies. The only relevant exemption from this prohibition is contained in §7(b), which was enacted as part of St.1982, c.612 and took effect on March 29, 1983. This exemption permits your wife to have a financial interest in a state contract provided that:
- her financial interest would be in a contract with a state agency other than ABC or an agency regulated by ABC;
- she does not participate in or have official responsibility as an ABC employee for any of the activities of the contracting agency;
- her contract is made after public notice or where applicable, through competitive bidding;5/ and
- she files with the Commission a written financial disclosure of her interest in the contract.6/
Thus, your wife will not be able to offer her services as a travel agent to ABC or ABC employees as long as she works for that agency. Whether she may do so for other state agencies or employees will turn on whether the above four conditions are satisfied.
End of Decision
DATE AUTHORIZED: April 12, 1983