The Minnesota Senate is spending $330 per hour for legal advice to deal with a possible lawsuit from ex-employee Michael Brodkorb, it disclosed Friday.

The Senate disclosed the rate and the private attorney's representation agreement on Friday after repeated questions about the arrangement.

The Senate hired attorney Dayle Nolan to deal with Brodkorb's threat to will sue the Senate over his firing late last year. Brodkorb, a former communications director, was fired in the wake of former Senate Majority Leader Amy Koch's resignation from leadership after she was confronted about an affair she had with Brodkorb.

Nolan has attended at least six hours of ethics committee hearings related to the Senate's handling of the affair as well as a more than two-hour hearing over the rejection of Brodkorb's unemployment insurance claim.

Senate Majority Leader Dave Senjem, R-Rochester, said Friday afternoon that he did not know how much her services had cost the Senate.

"I'm not sure we've gotten a bill yet to be honest with you," Senjem told reporters. "The clock runs. I can't tell you as I stand here what the odometer is on this one."

The Star Tribune and other news outlets had formally requested access to any contract or invoices that Nolan had signed with the Senate. Cal Ludeman responded to the newspaper on Wednesday that while the Senate was required to provide the Star Tribune with copies of invoices, "to date, we have not received an invoice(s) from Dayle Nolan or her firm." Senate officials have said they do not have a contract with Nolan.

But late Friday, the Senate disclosed a two-page letter from Nolan confirming her representation of Senate in the Brodkorb matter. The agreement, dated January 23 of this year, not only says that she will receive a rate of $330 an hour but also that she will bill the Senate "monthly for fees and costs incurred," as well as for ancillary costs.

The late Friday release of information came after months of questions from the media and from senators about the arrangement with the attorney.

Earlier Friday, Senjem estimated the Senate was paying Nolan between $200 and $300 an hour.

Here's the representation agreement:

Letter of Representation_2