Prohibits statewide elected officers and certain appointed officers from receiving compensation for any book or other published work written during the course of their term of service.
NEW YORK STATE ASSEMBLY MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF LEGISLATION submitted in accordance with Assembly Rule III, Sec 1(f)
 
BILL NUMBER: A7107
SPONSOR: Byrne
 
TITLE OF BILL:
An act to amend the public officers law , in relation to prohibiting
statewide elected officers and certain appointed officers from receiving
compensation for any book or other published work written during the
course of their term of service
 
PURPOSE OR GENERAL IDEA OF BILL:
Any officer elected to a statewide office within the state or state
salaried positions filled by direct appointment by the governor and
confirmed by the Senate is prohibited from selling or receiving compen-
sation for any book or other published work written during their term of
public service in such position.
 
SUMMARY OF PROVISIONS:
Section 1: Establishes which statewide elected officials and appointed
officials are prohibited from profiting from a book or other published
work written while serving in that position.
It is clarified that selling or receiving compensation for a book or
published work written before or after such term is not prohibited.
Section 2: Provides the effective date, which is the one hundred eight-
ieth day after becoming law.
 
JUSTIFICATION:
Governor Cuomo's laundry list of scandals have cast a dark cloud over
his administration and its ability to continue leading New York during
this challenging time. One of the scandals which has received consider-
ably more media attention in recent weeks relates to the Governor's
decision to write and sell the book in the middle of an ongoing pandemic
that has plagued our nation and our state. The Governor's book, Ameri-
can Crisis: Leadership Lessons from the COVID-19 Pandemic has become
subject to significant scrutiny that goes beyond the obvious criticism
of publishing and promoting a book as COVID-19 continued to negatively
impact so many of our fellow New Yorkers.
An article from the Democrat & Chronicle shined a light on a potential
conflict of interest when a firm with a lucrative state contract hosted
a private webinar in 2020 with the Governor and purchased large quanti-
ties of his book to provide to their employees (Campbell, 2020). The
article consequently exposed a flaw in our state's ethics laws concern-
ing potential conflicts that can arise from publishing a book while in
office. This is not the first occurrence of such issues arising from an
elected official's book deal. According to an LA Times story from 1989,
former U.S. House Speaker James Wright (D) of Texas found himself
embroiled in scandal, in part due to an Ethic Committee's finding charg-
ing:
"Wright with 69 violations of House rules, including $145,000 in
improper gifts from Ft. Worth developer George A. Mallick Jr. and
attempts to evade House limits on honorariums by selling copies of
his book to trade associations and other groups in lieu of
accepting speaking fees"(Jackson, 1989).
Criticism of Governor Cuomo's book deal and further research into former
Speaker Wright's scandal prompted the sponsor to solicit feedback in an
unscientific 24 hour poll on social media where of 1,917 votes cast,
94.9% agreed with prohibiting full-time state elected officials from
writing and selling a book during the term of their elected office
(@Byrne4NY, 2021; Whalen, 2021).
After drafting this legislation which prohibits certain state-wide
public officials from writing and selling a book during their term of
office, the list of compelling reasons to support such a prohibition has
only lengthened. Recent news reports from March 2021 in the NY Times and
Buffalo News have alleged the Governor's book deal exceeded $4 million
dollars and that state employees and aides had assisted the Governor
with his personal project in writing and/or editing the book (McKinley,
Hakin & Alter; Precious).
Shortly after the March 2021 NY Times article, the Governor's office
responded to a FOIL request (initiated back in August 2020) and released
additional details pertaining to the book deal which confirmed some of
the information previously reported on by the NY Times. Reviewing the
Buffalo News report, it seems likely that the Governor may have violated
part of the terms set forth by the Joint Commission on Public Ethics. In
July Governor Cuomo was reportedly given permission to write the book by
the state ethics agency, as long as the subject matter of the book was
"unrelated to the governor's duties" in office. The title of the book
alone seems to violate that condition.
The reported use of government employees to assist the Governor in his
book also raises added concerns about potential violations of New York
State's Public Officers Law S § 74 part e.
"No officer or employee of a state agency, member of the legislature
or legislative employee should engage in any transaction as
representative or agent of the state with any business entity in
which he or she has a direct or indirect financial interest that
might reasonably tend to conflict with the proper discharge of his
or her official duties."
More recently it was reported the Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics
in Washington (CREW), a public sector watchdog, has filed a formal
complaint with the New York State Board of Elections against Governor
Cuomo for violating the law (2021). In their complaint CREW provided
specific evidence detailing how the Governor used his campaign's
resources to promote and sell his book for personal profit. One of the
most blatant examples is a copy of an email from the Governor's campaign
directing supporters to an Amazon page to order his book. At the bottom
of the email, it clearly stated it was "Paid for by Andrew Cuomo for New
York, Inc."
As a matter of public policy, we should strengthen our ethics laws and
prevent state-wide officials from engaging in book deals during the term
of their public office. In no way would this infringe on anyone's first
amendment right. Officials remain welcome to write and provide their
opinions for free, but so long as they are compensated by taxpayers this
added restriction should be considered a condition of their employment
with the state.
SOURCES
Campbell, J. (2020, Oct. 2) Andrew Cuomo holds webinar with firm that
promised his book to employees. Democrat & Chronicle. Retrieved April
1, 2021 from  
HTTPS://WWW.DEMOCRATANDCHRONICLE.COM/
STORY/NEWS/POLITICS/ALBANY/2020/10/0 2/AND
REW-CUOMO-SKADDEN-VIDEOCONFERENCE-BOOK/ 5884655002/
Jackson, R. (1989, June 1) The Resignation of Jim Wright: Speaker's
Downfall. LA Times. Retrieved April 1, 2021 from
 
HTTPS://WWW.LATIMES.COM/ARCHIVES/ LAXPM-1989-06-01-MN-1334-STORY.HTML
@Byrne4NY (2021, March 24). Twitter Poll. Retrieved April 1, 2021 from
 
HTTPS://TWITTER.COM/BYRNE4NY/ STATUS/1374888364265066499?S=21
Whalen, R. (2021, March 25) Assemblyman Proposes Prohibiting Profits for
Statewide Elected Officials. Spectrum News. Retrieved April 1, 2021 from
 
HTTPS://SOECTRUMLOCALNEWS.COM/NYS/
CENTRAL-NY/POLITICS/2021/03/25/ASSEMBL
YMANPROPOSES-OROHIBITINGPUBLISHING-PROFITS- FOR-STATEWIDE-ELECTED-OFFI-
CIALS
McKinley, J., Hakim, D. & Alter, A. (2021, March 31) As Cuomo Sought $4
Million Book Deal, Aides Hid Damaging Death Toll. NY Times. Retrieved
April 1, 2021 from  
HTTBS://WWW.NYTIMES.COM/2021/03/31/NVREGION/ CUOMO-
BOOKNURSINGHOMES.HTML? FBCLID-IWAROWJJNCAFY B4U2EV42TOG3ZSONMMAPA7IX09
W08NTOTOPADGBSPANS
Precious, T. (2021, March 31) Seven months later, Cuomo administration
divulges details about his Covid-19 book deal. Buffalo News. Retrieved
March 31, 2021 from  
HTTPS://BUFFALONEWS.COM/NEWS/STATE-
AND-REGIONAL/SEVENMONTHS-LATER-CUOMO-
ADMINISTRATION-DIVULGES-DETAILS-ABOUT- HIS-COVID-19-BOOK-DEAL/ARTICLE
E2BA3OBA-9275-11EB9642-83FEDBD461FC.HTML
Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (2021, April 1).
CREW files complaint against Andrew Cuomo  
Press Release. Retrieved
April 1, 2021 from  
HTTPS://WWW.CITIZENSFORETHICS.ORG/
LEGAL-ACTION/LEGALCOMPLAINTS/CREW-FILE
S-COMPLAINT-AGAINST-ANDREW-CUOMO/?FBCLID=IWAR2WUTT7BYBQZXCP4MFZTGNWUSSL2M
WARJ73XIYY3ZVOOKEZTSER4VRWUU
 
PRIOR LEGISLATIVE HISTORY:
New Bill
 
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS FOR STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS:
None
 
EFFECTIVE DATE:
One hundred eightieth day after becoming law.
STATE OF NEW YORK
________________________________________________________________________
7107
2021-2022 Regular Sessions
IN ASSEMBLY
April 22, 2021
___________
Introduced by M. of A. BYRNE -- read once and referred to the Committee
on Governmental Operations
AN ACT to amend the public officers law , in relation to prohibiting
statewide elected officers and certain appointed officers from receiv-
ing compensation for any book or other published work written during
the course of their term of service
The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-bly, do enact as follows:
1 Section 1. Subdivision 3 of section 74 of the public officers law is
2 amended by adding a new paragraph j to read as follows:
3 j. No officer elected to a statewide office within the state or who
4 holds an office filled by direct appointment by the governor, that
5 receives a state salary, and requires senate confirmation may sell or
6 receive compensation for any book or other published work written during
7 their term of service in such position. This paragraph shall not prohib-
8 it such a person from selling or receiving compensation for any book or
9 other such published work written either before or after such term of
10 service.
11 § 2. This act shall take effect on the one hundred eightieth day after
12 it shall have become a law.
EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
[] is old law to be omitted.
LBD10770-01-1