• letter
  • print
  • follow
Gina Bull, Sen. Mary Margaret Haugen’s new legislative assistant, staffs the senator’s new office in Oak Harbor. - Jim Larsen / Whidbey News-Times
Gina Bull, Sen. Mary Margaret Haugen’s new legislative assistant, staffs the senator’s new office in Oak Harbor.

Haugen’s Oak Harbor office called political

By JIM LARSEN
Whidbey News Times Editor

May 10 2008

A taxpayer-funded office in the heart of her election opponent’s territory has put State Sen. Marry Margaret Haugen under political fire.

Haugen, D-Camano Island, is set to formally launch her Oak Harbor office Wednesday afternoon, May 21, with on open house at 1901 SE Dock St., Suite 4.

Republican Party Chairman Luke Esser sent out a news release Thursday calling Haugen’s new office “one of the most blatant uses of taxpayer dollars for campaign purposes” he has ever seen.

Esser estimates Haugen’s office in Oak Harbor will cost taxpayers $58,000 a year, and claimed Senate Democrats gave Haugen “a publicly-funded campaign operative.”

That person is Haugen’s new “managing legislative assistant,” Oak Harbor resident Gina Bull, who will staff the senator’s office in town. Bull formerly ran unsuccessfully for the State House as a Democrat. She later went to work for former Republican Rep. Chris Strow, who was trying to show his bipartisanship by hiring a Democrat.

Bull reacted sharply to Esser’s charge that her new job is political.

“I take it very personally,” she said Friday. “This is not the first time dirty politics has been played. It’s a lack of character if you have to do that — it’s a party thing.”

Citing her experience running her own campaign and working for Strow, Bull said she fully understands the difference between campaigning and serving constituents. She said her Oak Harbor office has nothing to do with campaigning and will take no correspondence or phone calls on anything to do with the campaign.

“It’s a real slam on me personally, the assumption that I wouldn’t know the difference,” Bull said.

“It’s a legislative office,” Haugen told the News-Times on Thursday, fuming at the Republican’s charges. “It has nothing to do with this campaign. I’ve not kicked off my campaign.”

Haugen’s Republican opponent, Oak Harbor businesswoman Linda Haddon, announced her candidacy months ago. She was reluctant to get into the fray over Haugen’s office Friday, but did say that “I have questions about how it’s paid for, too.” Beyond that, Haddon said, “I’m going to worry about the ferries, senior citizens and about taxes.”

Haugen said she won’t officially be a candidate until next month when her campaign office opens in Stanwood. Her campaign manager will be Coupeville resident Courtney Jones.

Haugen said she has been trying to open a legislative office in the 10th District for years. Ten years ago she had one in Mount Vernon, but that’s on the outskirts of her district.

“I chose Oak Harbor because it’s the center of the district,” she said. “I’ve struggled with Oak Harbor for a long time.”

Haugen said it will be Bull’s job to help her “work more closely with the people I represent.” She will run the office and stand in for Haugen at various meetings the senator can’t attend personally.

Generally, the state pays for one full-time aide for each senator, but a few have two. Haugen now joins the ranks of those with two. She chairs the powerful Senate Transportation Committee.

Esser claimed only the leaders of each party caucus in the Senate have two aides. The new position for Haugen, he charged, “was done behind closed doors and kept secret from other senators, as well as the public.”

“That’s simply not true,” Haugen said of the allegation. She said the chairman of the Ways and Means Committee also has two aides.

Bull looked up the numbers and found that 15 senators have district offices, and that six have two legislative aides. Many House members also have district offices, staffed by aides when the Legislature is not in session. Tenth District Rep. Norma Smith, R-Clinton, recently opened an office in Coupeville, for example.

Opening the Oak Harbor office will cost more than Bull’s salary and the $325 monthly rent, Haugen said. For other office expenses she will use the $1,900 a quarter each senator receives for miscellaneous expenses. That previously helped pay for her gas mileage expenses, she said. “Some senators jut pocket it,” she said.

Haugen said Republican criticism won’t change her plan to open her Oak Harbor office next week. “I’m not going to close that office, it’s there to serve the people,” she said.

The state Republican Party sees Haugen as vulnerable this year. Esser said in 2005 she received only 50.1 percent of the vote, which is why he thinks she opened an office in Oak Harbor.

“Senator Haugen should just come clean and pay her campaign staff from her campaign funds, rather than expecting taxpayers to foot the bill,” he said.

Whidbey News Times Editor Jim Larsen can be reached at editor@whidbeynewstimes.com or 360.675.6611.
  • letter
  • print
  • follow
COMMENTING RULES: We encourage an open exchange of ideas in the PNWLocalNews.com community, but we ask you to follow our guidelines for respecting community standards. In a nutshell, don't say anything you wouldn't want your mother to read. So keep your comments:
  • Civil
  • Smart
  • On-topic
  • Free of profanity

We ask that all participants own their words by registering for an account. It's a simple process that will take seconds and helps keep our comments free of trolls, cranks, and drive-by commenters.

As a community site, we ask that the community help by using the "Flag" button on each comment if they feel the comment has violated the rules. You can also use the up and down arrows on each comment to voice your opinion about that particular comment.

Want to tell us something but you don't want it to be public? Talk to us privately.

Most Read Stories

Whidbey News-Times

  • Kids removed as boat left high and dry at Oak Harbor Marina
    WHIDBEY NEWS TIMES
    Jul 06 2009, 4:14 PM · UPDATED
  • Police worry there may be more victims
    WHIDBEY NEWS TIMES
    Jun 26 2009
  • Small quake hits Whidbey Island
    WHIDBEY NEWS TIMES
    Jul 02 2009, 12:47 PM · UPDATED
  • Transit tax hits bump in Oak Harbor
    WHIDBEY NEWS TIMES
    Jul 07 2009, 4:36 PM · UPDATED
  • Families celebrate fantastic Fourth
    WHIDBEY NEWS TIMES
    Jul 07 2009, 3:46 PM · UPDATED
  • Oak Harbor moves to keep affordable housing alive
    WHIDBEY NEWS TIMES
    Jul 08 2009, 10:06 AM · UPDATED

Whidbey Island

  • Kids removed as boat left high and dry at Oak Harbor Marina
    WHIDBEY NEWS TIMES
    Jul 06 2009, 4:14 PM · UPDATED
  • Police worry there may be more victims
    WHIDBEY NEWS TIMES
    Jun 26 2009
  • UPDATE | TRAFFIC ADVISORY | Still a long ferry line in Clinton
    SOUTH WHIDBEY RECORD
    Jul 06 2009, 11:08 AM · UPDATED
  • Small quake hits Whidbey Island
    WHIDBEY NEWS TIMES
    Jul 02 2009, 12:47 PM · UPDATED
  • Transit tax hits bump in Oak Harbor
    WHIDBEY NEWS TIMES
    Jul 07 2009, 4:36 PM · UPDATED
  • Oak Harbor moves to keep affordable housing alive
    WHIDBEY NEWS TIMES
    Jul 08 2009, 10:06 AM · UPDATED

Washington

  • Man's legs crushed when he's hit from behind at Bellevue car wash
    BELLEVUE REPORTER
    Jun 30 2009, 5:36 PM · UPDATED
  • Kids removed as boat left high and dry at Oak Harbor Marina
    WHIDBEY NEWS TIMES
    Jul 06 2009, 4:14 PM · UPDATED
  • Victim of freak car wash accident in serious condition | Police considering award for witness who came to his aid
    BELLEVUE REPORTER
    Jul 06 2009, 6:01 PM · UPDATED
  • 'The World': It's luxurious. It's big. And it's coming to Friday Harbor
    JOURNAL OF THE SAN JUANS
    Jul 05 2009, 8:28 AM · UPDATED
  • Police worry there may be more victims
    WHIDBEY NEWS TIMES
    Jun 26 2009
  • Woman needs help to fulfill final legacy
    KIRKLAND REPORTER
    Jul 08 2009, 3:53 PM · UPDATED