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- <text id=91TT1010>
- <title>
- May 13, 1991: Fly Free Or Die
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- May 13, 1991 Crack Kids
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 16
- Fly Free Or Die
- </hdr><body>
- <p>While Sununu stonewalls, TIME uncovers further evidence of ethics
- violations stemming from his business-and-pleasure junkets
- </p>
- <p>By DAN GOODGAME/WASHINGTON--With reporting by Michael Duffy/
- Washington and Rod Paul/Concord
- </p>
- <p> Most people who work at the White House treat an order
- from the President as holy writ. So everyone expected quick
- action when George Bush, embarrassed by news stories on the
- freeloading travels of chief of staff John Sununu, directed him
- to "get it all out" and make "full disclosure" of his expensive
- trips aboard Air Force executive jets to ski resorts in Colorado
- and to his home in New Hampshire.
- </p>
- <p> Instead, Sununu stonewalled. At Bush's insistence, he
- issued a list of his White House travels, but it has proved to
- be incomplete, inaccurate and misleading. It conceals crucial
- information that TIME has obtained concerning at least four
- family skiing vacations and a fifth trip to his New Hampshire
- home that were financed by corporate interests--in violation
- of federal ethics laws. Sununu declined requests for interviews
- about his travels, smugly assuring associates that if he simply
- hunkered down and said nothing more, "this whole thing will blow
- over." But Sununu's troubles are not going away just yet.
- President Bush, who had earlier tried to defuse the matter by
- suggesting that White House travel policies might need updating,
- last week reversed himself and authorized White House counsel
- Boyden Gray to investigate whether Sununu has violated existing
- travel and ethics rules.
- </p>
- <p> The situation was clearly irritating to Bush, who at
- week's end suffered a heartbeat irregularity that is often
- associated with stress. Stricken with shortness of breath while
- jogging at Camp David, the President was rushed to Bethesda
- Naval Hospital, where initial tests showed no serious heart
- damage. The incident took the spotlight off the high-flying
- chief of staff--but only momentarily.
- </p>
- <p> Though junketing on government aircraft is a common
- practice among high Washington officials, including many members
- of Congress, it does not sit well with the public at a time of
- recession, rising taxes and budgetary belt tightening. Eyebrows
- were raised last week, for example, when CBS News reported that
- Vice President Dan Quayle and Transportation Secretary Samuel
- Skinner had taken an Air Force execujet to Georgia for a golf
- weekend that cost taxpayers an estimated $27,000.
- </p>
- <p> But Sununu's conduct raises questions that go far beyond
- the use of taxpayer-funded planes and invites a new twist on
- the New Hampshire motto: LIVE FREE OR DIE. Since he joined the
- Bush Administration, Sununu and his family have taken at least
- four ski trips and one trip home to New England that were
- financed in large part by corporate interests. Yet federal law
- forbids officials to accept valuable gifts, including travel and
- recreation, except from certain charitable and educational
- organizations. Items:
- </p>
- <p> THE CHRISTA MCAULIFFE SABBATICAL FOUNDATION, named after
- the New Hampshire schoolteacher killed in the 1986 explosion of
- the space shuttle Challenger, raises money to give teachers time
- off to pursue further studies. The foundation, which was
- organized by Sununu in 1986, holds a four-day fund-raising ski
- event each February at the Waterville Valley Resort in New
- Hampshire. For the past three years, Sununu and unidentified
- members of his family have flown to the event on Air Force
- executive jets. The Su nunus in 1989 flew up on Air Force Two
- with Vice President Quayle. In response to written questions
- submitted by TIME to the chief of staff, a Sununu aide explained
- that his boss paid no reimbursement to the government because
- he and his family were Quayle's "guests." In 1990 and 1991 Sunu
- nu took his own jet and deemed the ski weekends to be "official
- business" for himself; the government was reimbursed $845 in
- 1990 and $4,430 in 1991 for the equivalent of commercial coach
- airfares for his wife and children.
- </p>
- <p> An aide to Sununu claimed that the McAuliffe Foundation
- paid for the family's airfare. But the organization's books,
- examined by TIME, show no such payment. Thomas Corcoran,
- president of the Waterville Valley Resort, told TIME he wrote
- checks for the airfare, lodging and expenses of the Sununu
- family and other "celebrity" skiers out of a separate account
- funded by corporate sponsors of the McAuliffe event. Among them:
- Coca-Cola, McDonald's and Siemens Nixdorf, the electronics firm
- that was awarded a $7 million computer contract by the state of
- New Hampshire while Sununu was Governor in 1988.
- </p>
- <p> SKI MAGAZINE and its parent company, Times Mirror, invited
- Sununu to ski and speak at its three-day gathering in Aspen,
- Colo., in December 1990. As usual, Sunu nu classified this trip
- as official business and flew out on an Air Force jet. Ski
- magazine officials, however, say they paid for lodging, meals
- and ski passes for Sununu and his wife. As reported by TIME last
- week, Sununu's office billed a ski-industry lobbying group, the
- American Ski Federation, $802 for Nancy Sununu's airfare. A
- Sununu aide later explained that the payments by Ski and the Ski
- Federation were "billing errors" that would be corrected by
- having the White House reimburse these groups and transferring
- the bills to the SIA Ski Educational Foundation, an educational
- organization from which Su nunu would normally be allowed to
- receive gifts of travel and recreation. Some Administration
- lawyers, however, question whether Sununu is allowed to accept a
- skiing-speaking invitation from a profitmaking corporation, Ski
- magazine, then cover for it by billing his expenses
- retroactively to an educational foundation.
- </p>
- <p> THE EAGLE-TRIBUNE of Lawrence, Mass., located only 10
- miles from Sununu's home in Salem, N.H., invited the chief of
- staff to speak at a newspaper banquet in June 1990. Sununu
- declared the trip to be official business and flew to Lawrence
- on an Air Force jet, accompanied by an undisclosed number of his
- family members. The newspaper, according to one of its editors,
- reimbursed the government $1,920 for the family's airfares.
- </p>
- <p> Apart from the apparent impropriety of some of his travel
- arrangements, Sunu nu may be involved in a conflict of interest
- stemming from efforts to help a major ski developer. During his
- first Ski magazine weekend, in Vail, Colo., in 1989, Sununu was
- joined by an old political associate, Philip T. Gravink, who
- runs the Loon Mountain ski resort in New Hampshire's White
- Mountain National Forest. Gravink was a contributor to Sununu's
- political campaigns and let Sununu and his family ski for free
- when Sununu was Governor. At the time of the Vail event,
- Gravink had an application pending with the U.S. Forest Service
- and the Environmental Protection Agency to nearly double the
- size of his resort, and asked Sununu's counsel on how to speed
- the process. Sununu helped persuade Gravink that, as the
- developer later told the Manchester Union Leader, "our problem
- isn't environmental, it's political."
- </p>
- <p> Upon his return from Vail, Gravink wrote a letter to
- Sununu at the White House, describing the expansion he wanted.
- Sununu passed the letter to the EPA and the Forest Service and
- followed up with what one well-informed Washington official
- described as "a lot of bullying and bluster" that "made clear
- what outcome the White House wanted in this case."
- </p>
- <p> An aide to Sununu denied that any pressure was exerted on
- Gravink's behalf. Yet according to Ned Therrien, acting
- supervisor of the White Mountain National Forest, "Sununu has
- called several times and asked for updates on the progress" on
- Loon Mountain's application. Therrien emphasizes that Sununu
- only pressed for speedy action on the matter and did not
- specifically call for its approval. But Sunu nu's favorable view
- of the project is a matter of public record. "Well-done,
- environmentally safe growth should be allowed," Sununu said in
- a January 1990 interview with the Union Leader. He added that
- "from what I know," Loon Mountain's proposed expansion "falls
- into that category." It is mildly ironic that one of the
- founders of the Loon Mountain resort is Sununu's political idol,
- Sherman Adams, Dwight Eisenhower's former special assistant, who
- was forced to resign that position in 1958 because he accepted
- a vicuna coat and other gifts from a Boston industrialist.
- </p>
- <p> The controversy that continues to swirl around the chief
- of staff presents his boss with a dilemma. Sununu has been
- extremely useful to Bush as a lightning rod, absorbing political
- heat that might otherwise burn a popular President. Now Sununu
- is generating the heat and turning into a potential liability.
- Aides say that Bush, while annoyed at Sununu's excesses,
- continues to value his services. The President, they say, hopes
- that Gray's investigation will allow Sununu to "correct" his
- travel reimbursements and put the matter behind him. But that
- can only happen if Sununu stops stonewalling and explains, fully
- and publicly, the details of these junkets and the interests
- that bankrolled them.
- </p>
- <p>CHARGE IT TO THE TAXPAYER
- </p>
- <p> John Sununu is not the only high-living official in
- Washington. After a dose of austerity under Jimmy Carter, fancy
- cars and first-class travel are back for upper levels of the
- Executive Branch. Meanwhile members of Congress have their perks,
- junkets and expense accounts, which last year averaged $150,000.
- A sampler:
- </p>
- <p> LIMOUSINES
- </p>
- <p> Full-time cars and drivers are provided to all Cabinet
- Secretaries and House and Senate leaders. Agency heads and their
- deputies have to settle for door-to-door limousine service when on
- official business; ethics rules forbid private use. The vehicle of
- choice is a Lincoln Town Car equipped with a cellular phone.
- </p>
- <p> JUNKETS
- </p>
- <p> Members of the Administration and Congress can go globe-
- trotting as much as they please. A case in point: a 100-member
- delegation of congressional representatives, their spouses, aides
- and guests are preparing to take a 10-day trip to the Paris Air
- Show. Estimated cost to the taxpayers: as much as $1 million.
- </p>
- <p> AIR TRAVEL
- </p>
- <p> Government regulations require federal employees to fly coach
- when using commercial aircraft, but few Cabinet Secretaries and
- other higher-ups observe the rule. U.S. Trade Representative
- Carla Hills, for example, logged 104 days of travel last year.
- She flew first class on each trip.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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