Wichita Falls city councilors agree to pay fines in election-code violation complaints
Four members of the Wichita Falls City Council have agreed to pay fines to the Texas Ethics Commission to resolve a complaint of violations of the state’s election code.
Mayor Tim Short, District 3 Councilor Jeff Browning, District 4 Councilor Mike Battaglino and District 5 Councilor Tom Taylor agreed to pay the fines to the TEC. The fines are $500 each.
The fines stem from in-kind political donations provided to the candidates by the Political Action Committee of the Wichita Falls Professional Firefighters Association.
The TEC's findings regarding the in-kind donations were posted on the commission’s website on Thursday.
Short, Battaglino and Taylor were newly elected to the council on Nov. 7, 2023, and Browning was re-elected to a new term.
The commission found that each of the candidates were notified before the election that they had been endorsed by the firefighters’ PAC, that they provided the firefighters’ PAC and a Lubbock political consultant with photos, and participated in filming of an endorsement video paid for by the firefighters’ PAC.
The commission said the PAC paid the consultant $61,200 for work on the campaigns of its endorsed candidates.
The commission said the candidates did not disclose in-kind contributions from the firefighters’ PAC in campaign reports as originally filed. The commission found “credible evidence” of violations.
On a second allegation, the commission determined the candidates did not knowingly accept donations from the Wichita Falls Professional Firefighters Association, which is separate from the group’s PAC. Knowingly accepting such donations could violate an Elections Code rule against accepting donations by unions.
The conclusions reached by the commission indicate the individual councilors “neither admits or denies the finding of fact or conclusion of law.” The agreed resolution is “solely for the purpose of resolving the sworn complaint.”
The complaint was filed by Cathy Dodson, an unsuccessful candidate for the District 3 City Council seat.
In a separate allegation, Dodson claimed Browning accepted donations or made expenditures before appointing a campaign treasurer as required by the code. The commission found no evidence of a violation.
The firefighters association is collecting signatures to put collective bargaining and binding arbitration on the Nov. 5 ballot.
The city's Public Information Office responded that binding arbitration would obligate future councils and budgets and that the city already has measures in place to "get all parties to the table and make meaningful decisions."
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This article originally appeared on Wichita Falls Times Record News: Wichita Falls city councilors fined by Texas Election Commission