Sarah Palin's Corruption in Wasilla

Spenard Builders Supply's name has popped up in the trial of Senator 
Stevens. It worked on the house that is at the center of the VECO 
scandal as well


Wayne Barrett / Egregious Moderation / October 12, 2008


<http://delong.typepad.com/egregious_moderation/2008/10/wayne-barrett-s.html>http://delong.typepad.com/egregious_moderation/2008/10/wayne-barrett-s.html


The $12.5 Million sports complex and hockey rink that is the lasting 
monument to Palin's two
terms as Wasilla mayor is also a monument to the kind of insider 
politics that dismays Americans
of both parties.

Six months before Palin stepped down as mayor in October 2002, the 
city awarded nearly a half-million-dollar contract to design the 
biggest project in Wasilla history to Kumin Associates.
Blase Burkhart was the Kumin architect on the job--the son of Roy 
Burkhart, who is
frequently described as a "mentor" of Palin and was head of the local 
Republican Party (his wife, June, who also advised Palin, is the 
national committeewoman). Asked if the contract was a favor, Roy 
Burkhart, who contributed to her campaign in the same time frame that 
his son got the contract,
said: "I really don't know." Palin then named Blase Burkhart to a 
seven-member builder-selection committee that picked Howdie Inc., a 
mostly residential contractor owned at the time by Howard Nugent. 
Formally awarded the contract a couple of weeks after Palin left 
office, Nugent has
donated $4,000 to Palin campaigns. Two competitors protested the 
process that led to Nugent's contract. Burkhart and Nugent had done 
at least one project together before the complex--
and have done several since.

A list of subcontractors on the job, obtained by the Voice, includes 
many with Palin ties. One was Spenard Builders Supply, the state's 
leading supplier of wood, floor, roof and other "pre-engineered 
components." In addition to being a sponsor of Todd Palin's 
snow-machine team that has earned
tens of thousands for the Palin family, Spenard hired Sarah Palin to 
do a statewide television commercial in 2004. When the Palins began 
building a new family home off Lake Lucille in 2002
--at the same time that Palin was running for lieutenant governor and 
in her final months as mayor--Spenard supplied the materials, 
according to Antoine Bricks, who works in its Wasilla office. Spenard 
actually filed a notice "of its right to assert a lien" on the deed 
for the Palin property after contracting for labor and materials for 
the site. Spenard's name has popped up in the trial of Senator 
Stevens--it worked on the house that is at the center of the VECO 
scandal as well.

Todd Palin told Fox News that he built the two-story, 
3,450-square-foot, four-bedroom, four-bath, wood house himself, with 
the help of contractors he described as "buddies." As mayor, Sarah 
Palin blocked an effort to require the filing of building permits in 
the wide-open city, and there is no public record of who the 
"buddies" were. The house was built very near the complex, on a site 
whose city purchase led to years of unsuccessful litigation and, now, 
$1.3 million in additional costs, with a law firm that's also donated 
to Palin collecting costly fees from the city.
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