This is just the living freaking end.  Maybe when Sarah Palin said
she's a "reformer" she meant she went to Reform School?

Here are the big points, but the entire article is an important read
for anyone who cares about our economy and our country.

*Palin was paid per-diem pay from 4/22/2008 (4 days after Trig's
birth) until she flew to Juneau on 6/3/2008.

*At the same time she received per-diem allowance, more than 30 times
she also charged for some kind of "Lodging-Own residence" or "Lodging-
Wasilla residence."  Then 24 times she wrote undated report
amendments, deleting all references for staying at home, but still
charging the per diem.

*Her husband and daughter charged Alaska $43,490 for travel; many of
these trips were between their home in Wasilla and juneau (the
capital), 600 miles away.

* Todd Palin charged on an expense report $725 to fly to Edmonton,
Alberta for "information gathering and planning meeting with

*Northern Alberta Institute of Technology."  Then during that 3-day
trip he charged Alaska $291 for his per diem.  A note reads "costs
paid by Dept. of Labor."  In addition, he charged Alaska $1371 to fly
to Washington to attend a National Governors Association with Sarah
Palin.

-----------------

Palin Billed State for Nights Spent at Home
Taxpayers Also Funded Family's Travel

By James V. Grimaldi and Karl Vick
Washington Post Staff Writers
Tuesday, September 9, 2008; A01


ANCHORAGE, Sept. 8 -- Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin has billed taxpayers for
312 nights spent in her own home during her first 19 months in office,
charging a "per diem" allowance intended to cover meals and incidental
expenses while traveling on state business.

The governor also has charged the state for travel expenses to take
her children on official out-of-town missions. And her husband, Todd,
has billed the state for expenses and a daily allowance for trips he
makes on official business for his wife.

Palin, who earns $125,000 a year, claimed and received $16,951 as her
allowance, which officials say was permitted because her official
"duty station" is Juneau, according to an analysis of her travel
documents by The Washington Post.

The governor's daughters and husband charged the state $43,490 to
travel, and many of the trips were between their house in Wasilla and
Juneau, the capital city 600 miles away, the documents show.

Gubernatorial spokeswoman Sharon Leighow said Monday that Palin's
expenses are not unusual and that, under state policy, the first
family could have claimed per diem expenses for each child taken on
official business but has not done so.

Before she became the Republican Party's vice presidential nominee,
Palin was little known outside Alaska. Now, with the campaign
emphasizing her executive experience, her record as mayor of Wasilla,
as a state oil-and-gas commissioner and as governor is receiving
intense scrutiny.

During her speech at the Republican National Convention last week,
Palin cast herself as a crusader for fiscal rectitude as Alaska's
governor. She noted that she sold a state-owned plane used by the
former governor. "While I was at it, I got rid of a few things in the
governor's office that I didn't believe our citizens should have to
pay for," she said to loud applause.

Speaking from Palin's Anchorage office, Leighow said Palin dealt with
the plane and also trimmed other expenses, including forgoing a chef
in the governor's mansion because she preferred to cook for her
family. The first family's travel is an expected part of the job, she
said.

"As a matter of protocol, the governor and the first family are
expected to attend community events across the state," she said. "It's
absolutely reasonable that the first family participates in community
events."

The state finance director, Kim Garnero, said Alaska law exempts the
governor's office from elaborate travel regulations. Said Leighow:
"The governor is entitled to a per diem, and she claims it."

The popular governor collected the per diem allowance from April 22,
four days after the birth of her fifth child, until June 3, when she
flew to Juneau for two days. Palin moved her family to the capital
during the legislative session last year, but prefers to stay in
Wasilla and drive 45 miles to Anchorage to a state office building
where she conducts most of her business, aides have said.

Palin rarely sought reimbursement for meals while staying in Anchorage
or Wasilla, the reports show.

She wrote some form of "Lodging -- own residence" or "Lodging --
Wasilla residence" more than 30 times at the same time she took a per
diem, according to the reports. In two dozen undated amendments to the
reports, the governor deleted the reference to staying in her home but
still charged the per diem.

Palin charged the state a per diem for working on Nov. 22, 2007 --
Thanksgiving Day. The reason given, according to the expense report,
was the Great Alaska Shootout, an annual NCAA college basketball
tournament held in Anchorage.

In separate filings, the state was billed about $25,000 for Palin's
daughters' expenses and $19,000 for her husband's.

Flights topped the list for the most expensive items, and the daughter
whose bill was the highest was Piper, 7, whose flights cost nearly
$11,000, while Willow, 14, claimed about $6,000 and Bristol, 17,
accounted for about $3,400.

One event was in New York City in October 2007, when Bristol
accompanied the governor to Newsweek's third annual Women and
Leadership Conference, toured the New York Stock Exchange and met
local officials and business executives. The state paid for three
nights in a $707-a-day hotel room. Garnero said the governor's office
has the authority to approve hotel stays above $300.

Asked Monday about the official policy on charging for children's
travel expenses, Garnero said: "We cover the expenses of anyone who's
conducting state business. I can't imagine kids could be doing that."

But Leighow said many of the hundreds of invitations Palin receives
include requests for her to bring her family, placing the definition
of "state business" with the party extending the invitation.

One such invitation came in October 2007, when Willow flew to Juneau
to join the Palin family on a tour of the Hub Juneau Christian Teen
Center, where Palin and her family worship when they are in Juneau.
The state gave the center $25,000, according to a May 2008 memo.

Leighow noted that under state policy, all of the governor's children
are entitled to per diem expenses, even her infant son. "The first
family declined the per diem [for] the children," Leighow said. "The
amount that they had declined was $4,461, as of August 5."

The family also charged for flights around the state, including trips
to Alaska events such as the start of the Iditarod dog-sled race and
the Iron Dog snowmobile race, a contest that Todd Palin won.

Meanwhile, Todd Palin spent $725 to fly to Edmonton, Alberta, for
"information gathering and planning meeting with Northern Alberta
Institute of Technology," according to an expense report. During the
three-day trip, he charged the state $291 for his per diem. A notation
said "costs paid by Dept. of Labor." He also billed the state $1,371
for a flight to Washington to attend a National Governors Association
meeting with his wife.

Gov. Palin has spent far less on her personal travel than her
predecessor: $93,000 on airfare in 2007, compared with $463,000 spent
the year before by her predecessor, Frank Murkowski. He traveled often
in an executive jet that Palin called an extravagance during her
campaign. She sold it after she was sworn into office.

"She flies coach and encourages her cabinet to fly coach as well,"
said Garnero, whose job is equivalent to state controller. "Some do,
some don't."

Leighow said that the governor's staff has tallied the travel expenses
charged by Murkowski's wife: $35,675 in 2006, $43,659 in 2005, $13,607
in 2004 and $29,608 in 2003. Associates of Murkowski said the former
governor was moose hunting and could not be reached to comment.

In the past, per diem claims by Alaska state officials have carried
political risks. In 1988, the head of the state Commerce Department
was pilloried for collecting a per diem charge of $50 while staying in
his Anchorage home, according to local news accounts. The
commissioner, the late Tony Smith, resigned amid a series of
controversies.

"It was quite the little scandal," said Tony Knowles, the Democratic
governor from 1994 to 2000. "I gave a direction to all my
commissioners if they were ever in their house, whether it was Juneau
or elsewhere, they were not to get a per diem because, clearly, it is
and it looks like a scam -- you pay yourself to live at home," he
said.

Knowles, whose children were school-age at the start of his first
term, said that his wife sometimes accompanied him to conferences
overseas but that he could "count on one hand" the number of times his
children accompanied him.

"And the policy was not to reimburse for family travel on commercial
airlines, because there is no direct public benefit to schlepping kids
around the state," he said. The rules were articulated by Mike Nizich,
then director of administrative services in the governor's office,
said Knowles and an aide to another former governor, Walter Hickel.

Nizich is now Palin's chief of staff. He did not return a phone call
seeking comment. The rules governing family travel on state-owned
aircraft appear less clear. Knowles said he operated under the
understanding that immediate family could accompany the governor
without charge.

But during the Murkowski years, that practice was questioned, and the
state attorney general's office produced an opinion saying laws then
in effect required reimbursement for spousal travel.

Research editor Alice Crites in Washington contributed to this report.

(ED OF QUOTE)
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