Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah:
Net worth: Between $337,036 and $1.33 million.1995 income: Between $209,006 and $305,077. Of that, $133,600 was his Senate salary, and the rest was from investment income. He made $1,677 in royalties from recordings he helped make for Living Scriptures before he came to the Senate.
Assets: Between $387,036 and $1.34 million (not counting his homes or cars).
Liabilities: Between $15,001 and $50,000 for legal fees from defense of a Senate Ethics Committee probe into his involvement with the Bank of Credit and Commerce International. The probe said it found no evidence of wrongdoing by Hatch.
Travel paid by outside groups: Trip to Houston paid by Medistar Corp. for a speech; to Budapest, Hungary, paid by the Salt Lake City Bid Committee for the Olympics; to Kenai, Alaska, by the Kenai River Classic for Hatch and a son to participate in a charity event; from Kenai to Anchorage, Alaska, paid by Atlantic Richfield/British Petroleum for a fact-finding tour; from Utah to Ketchikan, Alaska, paid by the Waterfall Tournament for Hatch and his wife to participate in a charity event; to Sun Valley, Idaho, paid by the Danny Thompson Memorial Golf Tournament for Hatch and his wife; to Chicago paid by the National Association of Independent Insurers for a speech; and to Puerto Rico paid by the Puerto Rico USA Foundation for Hatch and his wife for a fact-finding tour.
Sen. Bob Bennett, R-Utah:
Net worth: About $20 million, he said in an interview.
1995 income: Between $230,855 and $256,749 - but that was less than the $455,188 interest he paid on a margin loan against his stock holdings, meaning he essentially had negative income.
Assets: Between $20.11 million and $49.49 million (not counting homes or cars). Bennett said in an interview it is closer to the lower end of that range than the higher. He said value of his stock in Franklin Quest is now between $13 million and $15 million.
Liabilities: Between $7.85 million and $28.75 million for real estate and other loans.
Travel paid by outside groups: Roundtrip to Boca Raton, Fla., for Bennett and his wife to speak to Polyconomics.
Memberships: Unpaid board member of Franklin Quest and trustee of the W.F. and F.G. Bennett Trust.
1ST U.S. HOUSE DISTRICT
Rep. Jim Hansen, R-Utah:
Net worth: Between $166,004 and $552,999 (not counting homes or cars).
1995 income: Between $142,550 and $153,749. Of that, $133,500 was his House salary, $3,949 was from a State Farm Insurance pension and the rest was from rent and interest.
Assets: Between $216,004 and $568,000 (not counting personal homes or cars). That includes a log-cabin office building (which he rents to his campaign), and three building lots in Farmington.
Liabilities: Between $15,001 and $50,000 for a mortgage on the office building he owns.
Travel paid by outside groups: Salt Lake City to Albuquerque round trip for two days paid by the Western States Coalition, and a one-day Salt Lake City-Phoenix round trip paid by the Western Regional Council.
Memberships: Chairman of the House Western Caucus, and co-chairman of the House Depot Caucus and the House Anti-Smoking Caucus.
Greg Sanders (D):
Net worth: Between $1,002 and $99,999 (not counting personal homes or cars).
1995 income: Between $105,527 and $105,727. Of that, $76,226 came as his salary as an attorney for Kipp and Christian, and $9,080 came from his U.S. Army Reserve salary. Also, $20,181 came from his wife's salary at Davis Hospital and Medical Center.
Assets: Between $51,002 and $115,000 (not counting homes or cars). Of that, between $50,001 and $100,000 is his portion of the Kipp and Christian profit-sharing fund.
Liabilities: Between $15,001 and $50,000 in a loan from the Kipp and Christian profit sharing fund.
Memberships: President of Kipp and Christian.
2ND U.S. HOUSE DISTRICT
Rep. Enid Greene, R-Utah:
Net worth: Between -28,003 and -$161,997.
1995 income: Between $133,602 and $137,500. Her House salary was $133,600. The rest was from interest.
Assets: Between $3,003 and $47,000 (not counting personal cars or a home she later sold).
Liabilities: Between $75,003 and $165,000. Of that, between $65,002 and $150,000 was for unpaid income taxes for forms she and her ex-husband failed to file in 1994 and for understating the taxes she owed in 1993.
Memberships: Board member of Utah Travelers Aid Society, Utah Chamber Artists, Utah Narcotics Officer Association and the Utah Economic Development Board.
Merrill Cook (R):
Net worth: At least $2.12 million, and up to $2.32 million "or more," according to forms (not counting homes or cars). He said in an interview his net worth is in the "single digits of millions."
1995 income: Between $128,219 and $241,514. Of that, $17,514 was for his work as a KALL radio talk show host, $2,701 was salary as director of Cook Associates and between $107,705 and $221,000 came in income from investments.
Assets: At least $2.12 million, and up to $2.32 million "or more," forms say. He is now sole owner of Cook Associates, which owns Cook Slurry explosive manufacturing, and he said in an interview it is worth less than $10 million. Forms said he owns Federal Home Loan Bank bonds worth "over $1 million."
Liabilities: None.
Memberships: President and director of Cook Associates Inc., and talk show host at KALL 910 Radio.
R. Todd Neilson
Net worth: At least $1.02 million and up to $1.09 million "or more." He said in an interview his net worth is in the "low single digits of millions."
1995 income: Between $367,566 and $368,365. Almost all of that - $367,365 - came in salary and partnership allocation from his accounting firm of Neilson, Elggren, Durkin & Co.
Assets: At least $1.03 million and up to $1.1 million "or more," forms say, not counting personal homes or cars. Of that, "over $1 million" was the value of his partnership interest in his accounting firm. He listed membership in the Hidden Valley Country Club as worth between $15,001 ad $50,000.
Liabilities: Between $10,001 and $15,000 for an American Express Optima line of credit.
Memberships: President and partner of Neilson, Elggren, Durkin & Co.; chairman of the Utah Securities Advisory Board; and court-appointed bankruptcy trustee for more than 2,000 individuals and corporations.
Ross Anderson (D):
Net worth: Between $368,009 and $895,000 (not counting personal homes or cars).
1995 income: Between $153,577 and $194,872. Of that, $133,872 was his salary as a lawyer for Anderson & Karrenberg, and between $19,705 and $61,000 came from investment income.
Assets: Between $368,009 and $895,000 (not counting personal homes or cars). His stock in Anderson Lumber Co. is worth between $100,001 and $250,000. His profit-sharing and retirement plan at Anderson & Karrenberg is also worth between $100,001 and $250,000.
Liabilities: None.
Memberships: President and director of Anderson & Karrenberg, a law firm; president of the board for Guadalupe Educational Programs Inc., and for Citizens for Penal Reform.
Kelly Atkinson (D):
Net worth: Between $46,004 and $316,000.
1995 income: Between $119,411 and $120,610. That included his $52,847 salary from the Utah School Employee Association, plus a $5,700 car allowance from it; his $8,860 salary as a state legislator; $1,650 in director's fees from the Educator's Mutual Insurance Co.; his wife's $50,153 salary from West Jordan city; and between $201 and $1,400 in investment income.
Assets: Between $146,004 and $366,000 (not counting his personal home or cars).
Liabilities: Between $50,001 and $100,000 for a loan to a condominium partnership.
Memberships: Minority whip of the Utah House of Representatives and board member of West Jordan Rotary, Educators Mutual Insurance Co., Housing Corp. of America and Valley Service Board.
3RD U.S HOUSE DISTRICT
Rep. Bill Orton, D-Utah:
Net worth: Between $248,010 and $1.2 million (not counting his cars).
1995 income: Between $138,304 and $148,000 total. Of that, $133,600 was his House salary and the rest was from rent and interest income.
Assets: Between $698,010 and $1.54 million. Between $500,002 and $1 million of that comes from his two homes in Washington and Provo.
Liabilities: Between $350,001 and $450,000 from mortgages on his homes.
Travel paid by outside groups: Three-day round trip to San Diego for Orton and his wife paid by the Utah State Bar Association, and a one-day trip to Boise paid by Micron Technology.
Memberships Trustee of the Great Western Trail Foundation.
Chris Cannon (R):
Net worth: More than $20 million, he said in an interview. Forms gave the range as between $9 million and $11.56 million "or more" - and Cannon said it was more.
1995 income: Between $159,108 and $1.13 million - all from investment income. He eclipsed that, however, during the first three months of 1996 when he reported income between $1.04 million and $1.06 million or more. Most of that came in capital gains from the sale of stock.
Assets: Between $9.1 million and $11.6 million or more. Cannon listed seven separate assets worth "over $1 million" each including a Smith Barney account; stock in the companies of Advanced Resin Systems, Cannon Industries, Kyzen Corp., Raster Graphics and LJ Development; and a loan he gave to Cannon Industries.
Of note, forms also showed he gave his brother, former Senate candidate Joe Cannon, a loan worth between $50,001 and $100,000. Chris Cannon also said he had obtained about $20 million from the sale of his stock in Geneva Steel in 1991, and his reinvestments are worth somewhat more than that now.
Also of note, Cannon said he worries about news stories that recently said he is only worth $6 million. He said he earlier told a reporter off the top of his head he was worth "at least $6 million," because valuing some of his business ventures is difficult, but she left off the "at least" and others copied her.
Liabilities: Between $45,004 and $95,000. That includes between $15,001 and $50,000 owed for tuition at the private Meridian School; and between $10,001 and $15,000 each owed for landscaping by Western Valley Nurseries, an auto loan and a "commitment" to the Republican National Committee.
Memberships: Chairman, president and director of Cannon Industries; director and president of Cannon Industries China; and director of Advanced Resin Systems, CI Capital Group and Cannon Engineering Technologies.
Tom Draschil (R):
Net worth: Between $192,014 and $1.07 million (not counting homes or cars).
1995 income: Between $79,332 and $150,318 (but he reported possibly making more than that in just the first three months of 1996 - between $141,407 and $164,900). Of his 1995 total, $48,500 came from house remodeling and sales, and he made $130,000 from that in the first three months of 1996. The rest came from rent and interest.
Assets: Between $442,014 and $1.18 million (not counting personal homes or cars).
Liabilities: Between $110,004 and $250,000 for mortgages and loans.
Memberships: Director of Aid In Mexico.