You choose, we deliver
If you are interested in this story, you might be interested in others from The Journal Gazette. Go to www.journalgazette.net/newsletter and pick the subjects you care most about. We'll deliver your customized daily news report at 3 a.m. Fort Wayne time, right to your email.

Indiana

  • 20 participate in walk for cancer
    Only about 20 people showed up for the Inner City Cancer Walk Sunday afternoon at Freimann Square. Then again, the walk, sponsored by the Mirror Me Foundation, has competition.
  • 2 children dead in condo fire
    Fire Department spokesman Jason Kistler said a 38-year-old woman was taken to a hospital in critical condition.
  • Tuesday is deadline for Do Not Call list
    INDIANAPOLIS – Tuesday is the next deadline to sign up for Indiana's Do Not Call registry.
Advertisement
Associated Press
Mitch Daniels says he might not lobby in his first year at Purdue.

Ethics rules might bar Daniels from lobbying

– Gov. Mitch Daniels’ legal staff is trying to determine whether he can lobby state lawmakers when he takes over as president of Purdue University.

Daniels said Friday he wasn’t sure whether he could press members of the General Assembly on the university’s behalf because state ethics rules require a one-year “cool down” for public officials after leaving office. If the law is unclear, he said he would “lean” against lobbying in his first year at Purdue.

“If anything, I’m going to lean on the side of extra caution. If that means someone else tells the story down here tells the story for at least a year, that’s what it means,” Daniels said, motioning to Indianapolis.

Daniels was named Purdue’s president Thursday and will start in January.

The upcoming legislative session will be critical for university leaders as lawmakers craft the state’s next two-year budget. Indiana’s public universities have struggled with state funding cuts and rising tuition costs. Since 2009, Daniels has ordered more than $150 million in cuts to public education – about $30 million to Purdue.

But there likely will be more money for cash-starved programs next year. The state’s collection of taxes has improved, Daniels amassed a cash savings of roughly $1.8 billion, and a massive error in collecting corporate income taxes resulted in roughly $100 million more annually for the state.

Advertisement