Board of Governors, prison contract stories have top lawmakers' attention
Recent stories involving governance of the UNC system and how a key donor to Gov. Pat McCrory lobbied to extend a prison maintenance contract will be subjects examined by the powerful Government Operations Committee.
Posted — UpdatedHouse Speaker Tim Moore and Senate President Pro Tem Phil Berger head the Joint Legislative Commission on Government Operations. The committee functions as the highest level of legislative oversight, and its meetings are often harbingers of the issues senior lawmakers see as most pressing.
Also on the agenda is the examination of a controversial prison contract.
Officials with the department were leaning toward ending the contract, but documents provided under a public records request showed that top McCrory lieutenants prevailed on the department to sign an extension. Most controversially, memos recording the meeting suggest that Keith said his history of campaign donations should entitle him to "get something in return" for those donations. He made that remark during a meeting that the governor attended, although the governor has said he didn't hear the remark.
McCrory has criticized those stories, saying his administration did nothing wrong.
"The McCrory administration thoroughly reviewed the data through an ethical process and made a sound, business-like decision that was in the best interest of public safety as well as the taxpayers of North Carolina," a McCrory news release read following the story's publication.
According to the committee's agenda, they will hear from DPS Secretary Frank Perry and David Guice, a former lawmaker who is now director of the Division of Adult Correction and Juvenile Justice.
Meredith College political science professor David McLennan said the investigations into the contract could drag on into McCrory's re-election campaign.
"It just becomes a constant drip, and eventually it hurts them," McLennan said. "So, the story develops legs because of the number of people that are looking at it and the length of time that they're looking at it."
An ongoing investigation is bad news for any candidate, he said, but this could be an even more serious problem for McCrory.
"He made Democratic corruption the centerpiece of his (2012) campaign," he said. "No matter how this plays out, it still smells of the same sort of thing he was criticizing Democrats for three and a half years ago."
McLennan predicted McCrory's Democratic opponent will do everything he can to keep it in the public eye, too.
"It's just something that plays well with North Carolinians. First, wasted money, and second, being hypocritical," McLennan said. "That’s a good campaign ad series."
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