Bar graph showing how much campaign committee has raised so far versus how much that committee has spent in expenditures on the campaign.
kleinlieu opened this issue · 5 comments
This is Question 3 of 5 From the Public Ethics Commission
Also is there any way to cross check data and see if there are any overlaps between corporate contributors and campaign expenditures for campaign costs? Such as a sign maker contributes $700 to Quan then her campaign pays the same contributor to make signs for her campaign.
In-kind contributions are reported as both income (gift came in) and spending (we used it).
Interesting to see someone who offers cash to pay for a service instead of just donating it.
In-kind contributions is one way to get around the limit...
On Tue, Sep 9, 2014 at 5:43 PM, Phil Wolff notifications@github.com wrote:
In-kind contributions are reported as both income and spending.
Interesting to see someone who offers cash to pay for a service instead of
just donating it.—
Reply to this email directly or view it on GitHub
#5 (comment)
.
John C. Osborn
Digital Communications Manager
EdSource
707-845-7332
www.johncosborn.com
@bayreporta
Flickr: thereporta
STATEMENT OF CONFIDENTIALITY
The information contained in this electronic message and any attachments
may contain confidential or privileged information intended for the
exclusive use of the addressee(s). If you are not the intended recipient,
please notify the sender by reply e-mail and destroy all copies of the
original message and any attachments. In accordance with Electronic
Communications Privacy Act, 18 U.S.C.§§ 2510-2521.
Hadn't thought of in-kind vs limits!
So far, total in-kind is under $100k. Not trivial but not dominant. About 2-3x small donations.
Worth watching as some campaigns approach limits in the last weeks.
The mathbar accomplishes this.