MOTHER JONES BY E-MAIL

The 400 Homepage | Browse the 400 | Search the 400 | Industry Profiles | The 400 in 1998

home / The Mother Jones 400 / Richard T. Farmer (with Joyce E.) profile

 

RANK

IN
1998

DONOR NAME

INDUSTRY

TOTAL
CONTRIBUTIONS

 

PARTY

                       
 

15

 

32

 

Richard T. Farmer (with Joyce E.)
Chairman, Cintas Corp., Cincinnati, OH

 

Manufacturing & Retail

 

$721,000

 


Richard T. Farmer (with Joyce E.)
March 5, 2001

"I don't expect any special treatment when I give my money," Cintas chairman Richard T. Farmer explained to the Cincinnati Enquirer in 1997. "All I want is decent government."

Less than one year later, Cintas found itself in a fierce battle with the Environmental Protection Agency, which had proposed new wastewater treatment rules for industrial laundries. As the nation's largest uniform rental company, Cintas estimated that it stood to lose as much as $250,000 per laundering plant if the rules went into effect. Cintas, with one of the Republican Party's leading fundraiser's at the helm, joined industry trade groups to fight the proposal. When the dust cleared in 1999, the EPA had rescinded its proposal, citing its prohibitive cost as one of the reasons.

Farmer also said in 1997 he gives money to counteract campaign cash from labor unions: "I made contributions to whatever I could do to help Republicans defend themselves against that attack," told the Enquirer. This year, Cintas weighed in against the Occupational Safety and Health Administration's new ergonomics rules, which have been trumpeted by unions as a safeguard for workers. In a recent letter to OSHA, Richard's son and Cintas president, Scott D. Farmer, argued that the rules were vague, unreasonable, and would cost Cintas more than officially estimated. Republican members of Congress have said they will work to overturn the rules, even though OSHA expects them to prevent hundreds of thousands of workplace injuries every year.

At the same time, Cintas has begun making money from other OSHA regulations. Its Xpect First Aid division sells supplies and training classes to other companies seeking to comply with OSHA rules. Xpect says it added 11,000 customers in 1999.

Based in Cincinnati, Farmer made his fortune -- estimated at $1.6 billion by Forbes -- by building Cintas out of his grandfather's industrial rag-cleaning business. He is also director of Fifth Third Bankcorp, and a trustee of Miami University of Ohio, where he has donated his name and money to the business school. He gave an additional $100,000 to help fund George W. Bush's inauguration.

Farmer is a long-time friend of Carl Lindner (No. 4, $1,216,000), another major Republican donor who hails from Cincinnati. The city has become something of a GOP stronghold: Other residents who rank as top Republican contributors include real estate developer William O. Brisben (No. 149, $287,200), fruit wholesaler Bob Castellini (No. 283, $199,000), and two of George W. Bush's business backers, William O. DeWitt Jr. (No. 247, $216,550) and Mercer Reynolds (No. 318, $180,673).

-- Michael Scherer

 
Top 400 logo
#
#
#
THE MANUFACTURING AND RETAIL INDUSTRY
#
The top contributors in this industry are:
#
12. Richard DeVos Sr.
"stealth" donations
15. Richard Farmer
uniform giving
16. Terrance Watanabe
the $600,000 man
23. Sam Fox
aiding Ashcroft
65. Louis Weisbach
"incredibly creative"

All contributors in this industry

#
#
#
#
#
ACTIONS    
Search the MoJo 400
Browse the MoJo 400
E-mail the editors
  Discuss this article
E-mail this article to a friend
Buy this issue
Subscribe to Mother Jones
#
#
#















bookIN PRINT

CLICK HERE
for more great reading

headphones IN TUNE
New music every issue

CLICK TO LISTEN


This article has been made possible by the Foundation for National Progress, the Investigative Fund of Mother Jones, and gifts from generous readers like you.

© 2001 The Foundation for National Progress

About Us   Support Us   Advertise   Ad Policy   Privacy Policy   Contact Us   Subscribe   RSS