Anderson signed off on no-booze policy in '03
Rocky says he didn't notice section on alcohol
In 2003, Anderson put his name to the administrative policy forbidding the use of city tax dollars to purchase alcoholic beverages, according to city documents filed with the Salt Lake City Recorder's Office.
The 2003 documents were created as Anderson amended administrative policies of former Mayor Deedee Corradini. Two years ago, Anderson sought to amend the policies to give greater recognition to city employees.
Anderson signed the revised policy on March 13, 2003, on its second page, the same page that included the provision against alcohol.
The mayor said Thursday when he signed the document he looked only at the portions that were being amended and didn't notice the provision on alcohol.
"There are policies that are brought to me all the time to change certain provisions, and my interest will be directed to those" changes, Anderson said.
The mayor maintains he was unaware of that no-alcohol provision when he paid two bar tabs one for $457.88 and the other for $175.86 with his city credit card in July. How much went for alcohol and how much for food isn't stated on the bills, incurred when Anderson hosted Salt Lake City International Jazz Festival musicians and other mayors here for the Sundance Summit A Mayor's Gathering on Climate Protection, which Anderson and Robert Redford helped organize.
On the larger $457 bill which came from a private club he was less clear. The mayor maintains because other people paid portions of the tabs during the evening, he might have just paid for food portions and cover charges for his party of some 20 people.
He said he couldn't recall exactly what food was served. "There was variety of different things on a tray."
He declined to estimate what portion of the larger bill was for alcohol. He also didn't explain why on his expense report he listed specific names of people he'd paid for.
"You guys are embarrassing yourselves," Anderson said of the Morning News' coverage. "How many inches of your newspaper are you going to devote to this inane topic?"
He said the paper should be focusing on important issues like childhood asthma, which could be pollution-related, along the Wasatch Front instead of "venting your editor's bias against me on your front page."



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