From Deseret News archives:

Rocky to repay $457.88

Published: Friday, Oct. 14, 2005 11:29 p.m. MDT
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Salt Lake City taxpayers are getting a $457.88 refund.

Mayor Rocky Anderson said Friday he is paying back the $457.88 bill he racked up at the Grand America hotel lobby lounge last July.

The mayor also said he has issued a policy that establishes an Expense Review Committee that will examine all expenses and reimbursements incurred by city employees (except those under the authority of the City Council). Those expenses and reimbursements also will have to be posted on the city's Web site, Anderson said in a statement released late Friday.

In addition, Anderson is calling on the City Council and the Utah State Legislature to create gift bans similar to the one he adopted soon after taking office in 2000. The ban forbids all city employees (again with the exception of council workers) from accepting gifts of any kind, even a cup of coffee.

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"I urge the City Council to adopt a gift ban applying to Council members and employees under the control of the Council similar to the ban I have adopted for all other City employees," Anderson said in the statement. "Similarly, I urge all other elected officials in Utah, including the Utah State Legislature, to adopt a ban on gifts, which the vast majority of Utahns has favored for many years."

Anderson's $457.88 bill had raised eyebrows at City Hall since it included alcohol and, at the time, it was against city policy to use tax dollars to purchase alcoholic beverages. Anderson said he was unaware of the policy and has since changed it.

Also, some had complained that Anderson didn't provide a good accounting of who he paid for that night — when he was entertaining visiting mayors and jazz musicians attending the Salt Lake City International Jazz Festival. While he did include some specific names, he also gave the generic reference "and others" when describing whose tab he picked up that night.

In the statement Friday, Anderson said he broke no law and did nothing unethical but wanted to pay the money back to avoid even a hint of impropriety.

"I have reimbursed Salt Lake City Corp. for those expenses in order to resolve any concerns and in recognition that written city policy in effect at the time prohibited the purchase of alcoholic beverages with city funds (notwithstanding my authority to make exceptions to that policy)," the mayor said.

Anderson also said he has been careful with tax dollars. "Since my first day in office 5 1/2 years ago, I have been extremely frugal in spending taxpayers' money," he said.

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