Advisory Opinion No. 1999-28
Acceptance Of Free Or Reduced-Cost Meals By Division Of Special
Revenue Employees From Regulated Entities
Thomas Rotunda, Executive Director of the Division of Special Revenue
("DSR"), has asked how the Code of Ethics for Public Officials, Conn. Gen. Stat.
§1-79 et seq., and specifically the Codes gift law, applies to the acceptance of
free or reduced-cost meals by DSR employees from the Mohegan Sun and Foxwood Casinos.
DSR employees must remain on-site for all meals at the casinos, and are not scheduled
for meal breaks since they are considered "on-call" while there. At each casino,
there is a basic cafeteria area where neither casino employees nor DSR employees are
charged for any items, which include soft drinks, salad bar, continental breakfast foods
and simple desserts. Each casino cafeteria also has an entree area: the cost to DSR
employees for these hot meals range from $2.50 at Foxwoods to $4.00 at the Mohegan Sun.
The State Ethics Commission has previously ruled that the Gaming Enterprise which operates
the Foxwoods casino is a business subject to regulation by DSR for purposes of the
application of the Code of Ethics. See Advisory Opinion No. 92-22, 54 Conn. L. J.
14, p. 13C (10/6/92). Similarly, the Foxwoods Casino itself, and the Mohegan Sun Casino,
are also regulated entities. Therefore, the gift rules of the Code of Ethics apply to any
benefits given by the casinos to state employees.
Under Conn. Gen. Stat. §1-84(m), a state employee or public official may not knowingly
accept, directly or indirectly, any gift from an individual or entity regulated by the
employee or officials agency. Exempted from this gift ban is "food or beverage
or both, costing less than fifty dollars in the aggregate per recipient in a calendar
year, and consumed on an occasion or occasions at which the person paying, directly or
indirectly, for the food or beverage, or his representative, is in attendance." Conn.
Gen. Stat. §1-79(e)(9). Also exempted from the ban is "anything having a value of
not more than ten dollars," provided that the aggregate value of all such things
provided by one donor to one recipient do not exceed fifty dollars in any calendar year.
Conn.Gen. Stat. §1-79(e)(16).
Applying these rules to the facts under consideration, the food and beverage exception
does not extend to these meals, since it is unlikely that a representative of the casino
would accompany a DSR employee to a meal in the manner contemplated by the exception.
Under §1-79(e)(16), DSR employees could accept individual items worth less than
$10 up to $50 per year from each of the casinos. Beyond this limit, however, acceptance of
meals by DSR employees from the casinos is prohibited by the ethics laws.
The same reasoning applies whether the meal is offered free or at a reduced cost. The
value of the benefit must be calculated at the fair market rate. Therefore, if DSR
employees continue to eat food and beverages supplied by a casino, the casino must charge
them the fair market value of the items provided.
By order of the Commission,
Stanley Burdick,
Chairperson