WASHINGTON �� The Environmental Protection Agency says members of Administrator Scott Pruitt's family also stayed in the Capitol Hill condominium partly owned by the wife of an energy lobbyist under his $50-a-night lease, but that the arrangement doesn't violate ethics regulations.
Under the lease's unconventional terms, Pruitt was permitted to pay only for nights the condo was used. Documents reviewed by Bloomberg, including the lease and copies of his canceled checks, show he paid $6,100 to use the room over roughly six months last year after being chosen to run the EPA.
The disclosures follow criticism about Pruitt's use of first-class flights to travel around the world, a series of expensive trips including a visit by Pruitt and agency staff to Italy, and the installation of costly security measures in his Washington office at the EPA.
Critics, including the government watchdog group Public Citizen, have called for the EPA's inspector general to investigate. Jeffrey Lagda, a spokesman for the inspector general's office, declined to comment.
"This appears to be a gift from a lobbyist to the EPA administrator," Craig Holman, government affairs lobbyist for Public Citizen, said in a news release. "Scott Pruitt seems to be renting at well below market value �� from a family member of a lobbyist who has business before the EPA."
The condo is co-owned by health care lobbyist Vicki Hart, whose husband, J. Steven Hart, is president of Williams & Jensen, a lobbying firm with clients in industries regulated by the EPA. Hart has said he didn't personally lobby the EPA in 2017 or this year.
After ABC reported that Pruitt's daughter McKenna, who was a White House intern for part of 2017, stayed in a second bedroom at the condo, the agency released a March 30 memo from the EPA's designated ethics official, Kevin Minoli.
The memo, to EPA General Counsel Matthew Leopold, acknowledged that Pruitt's daughter and wife also used the condo when in Washington, but said it was permitted under federal guidelines because rent was paid.
If the bedroom had been used for an entire 30-day month, the rental cost would have been $1,500, "which is a reasonable market value," Minoli wrote.
EPA spokesman Jahan Wilcox said in a statement that "Administrator Pruitt's housing arrangement for both himself and family was not a gift and the lease was consistent with federal ethics regulations."
Steven Hart, in a statement to the Associated Press Friday, described Pruitt as a friend from Oklahoma with whom he had scant contact. "Pruitt paid all rent owed as agreed to in the lease," Hart said. "My wife does not and has not ever lobbied the EPA on any matters."
The EPA had to reimburse Hart $2,460 for damages after Pruitt's security detail in March 2017 broke down the building's front door, according to ABC News, citing a person familiar with the arrangement who it didn't name, and the Washington Post. Members of the security team believed Pruitt was unresponsive and needed rescue, but he was found groggy after an afternoon nap and declined medical attention, according to ABC News.
Pruitt, 49, has since signed a lease in a high-end complex on Capitol Hill, where rents for one-bedroom apartments are as high as $4,100 a month.
EPA officials have defended Pruitt's use of first-class travel on security grounds, saying he's been the subject of threats, although he's since shifted to coach. Several of the trips were to Pruitt's home state of Oklahoma, where as attorney general from 2011 to 2017 he sued the agency he now heads more than a dozen times.
In addition to criticisms about his travel expenses, Pruitt has been derided for installing a $25,000 secure "privacy booth" in EPA headquarters. Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., mocked it as a "cone of silence" after a device show in the 1960s spy spoof "Get Smart."