
NY Times documents Rep. Don Young's "obvious" tradeoff of a land deal after campaign contributions
The Alaska congressional delegation is making major ethics news today. The New York Times has a front page article on questionable dealings of the state's only Congressman, Don Young (R). The first few paragraphs explain how a fundraiser held for Young led to an earmark that local officials didn't want -- but the fundraiser's host did want:
It is no secret that campaign contributions sometimes lead to lucrative official favors. Rarely, though, are the tradeoffs quite as obvious as in the twisted case of Coconut Road.
The road, a stretch of pavement near Fort Myers, Fla., that touches five golf clubs on its way to the Gulf of Mexico, is the target of a $10 million earmark that appeared mysteriously in a 2006 transportation bill written by Representative Don Young, Republican of Alaska.
Mr. Young, who last year steered more than $200 million to a so-called bridge to nowhere reaching 80 people on Gravina Island, Alaska, has no constituents in Florida.
The Republican congressman whose district does include Coconut Road says he did not seek the money. County authorities have twice voted not to use it, until Mr. Young and the district congressman wrote letters warning that a refusal could jeopardize future federal money for the county.
The Coconut Road money is a boon, however, to Daniel J. Aronoff, a real estate developer who helped raise $40,000 for Mr. Young at the nearby Hyatt Coconut Point hotel days before he introduced the measure.
Mr. Aronoff owns as much as 4,000 acres along Coconut Road. The $10 million in federal money would pay for the first steps to connect the road to Interstate 75, multiplying the value of Mr. Aronoff’s land.


Cut and dried
It was as easy as using a credit card. A $40,000 campaign contribution bought $10 million worth of public funds, earmarked a few days later. A day's work for congressman Don Young of Alaska.
Two thirds of the Alaska congressional delegation is heading for the pen, so far.