You are here
A Critique of a New Industry-Local Government Ethics Code in New York
Here are some of the provisions of the new code, from an AG office press release. The complete ethics code can be found here:
- Bans wind companies from hiring municipal employees or their relatives, giving gifts of more than $10 during a one-year period, or providing any other form of compensation that is contingent on any action before a municipal agency
- Prevents wind companies from soliciting, using, or knowingly receiving confidential information acquired by a municipal officer in the course of his or her officials duties
- Requires wind companies to establish and maintain a public Web site to disclose the names of all municipal officers or their relatives who have a financial stake in wind farm development
- Requires wind companies to submit in writing to the municipal clerk for public inspection and to publish in the local newspaper the nature and scope of the municipal officer’s financial interest
- Mandates that all wind easements and leases be in writing and filed with the County Clerk
- Dictates that within thirty days of signing the Wind Industry
Ethics Code, companies must conduct a seminar for employees about
identifying and preventing conflicts of interest when working with
municipal employees
The code will be enforced by a task force that includes two local district attorneys, one of them from the county discussed in my blog entry (do district attorneys belong on ethics commissions?). A first violation is punishable by a fine of up to $50,000; subsequent violations draw fines of up to $100,000
This ethics code focuses on disclosure and recusal. And its principal recusal provision is
poorly written and inadequate:
- General Standard: The Wind Company shall
not directly or indirectly offer to, or confer on, a Municipal Officer,
his or her Relative, or any third party on behalf of such Municipal
Officer any benefit under circumstances in which it could reasonably be
inferred the benefit would induce such Municipal Officer to commit an
official act or to refrain from performing an official duty in
connection with Wind Farm Development, unless such Municipal Officer
recuses him or herself from any official duties in connection with Wind
Farm Development.
How can a wind company refrain from doing something based on whether
the official later recuses him or herself (and what if the benefit has already been given, as has happened throughout the area)? This is an impossible
standard, and would not hold up in a suit. It should be rewritten. And
when it's rewritten, it should be considered whether there are certain
positions that should not be given any benefit by a wind company no
matter what.
On the other hand, the provision requiring that an official have
recused himself or herself in order to be hired by a wind company
works, although it could be made more clear the extent of the recusal
required -- once is enough, or must the official have withdrawn from
day one?
Here's a worthless provision, which provides none of the promised
restrictions in its title:
- Restrictions on Easements/Leases with
Municipal Officers: The Wind Company shall not enter into any agreement
with any Municipal Officer that requires the Municipal Officer to
support or cooperate with Wind Farm Development in any manner that
relates to the Municipal Officer’s official duties.
Who in his or her right mind would enter into an agreement requiring
an official to support a development? Just having the easement or
investment is enough to put an official's personal interests in
conflict with his or her obligations of impartiality and concern for
the public interest. This provision should be rewritten or cut.
The confidentiality provision is oddly one-sided, because this is an
ethics code only for wind companies, not for the other side of the
equation. This creates problems not too much unlike most local
government ethics codes, which let contractors off without any
obligations. If wind companies have to agree to abide by this ethics
code, why can't towns and counties do the same thing, and take on some
obligations themselves?
- Confidential Information: The Wind
Company shall not solicit, use, or knowingly receive confidential
information acquired by a Municipal Officer in the course of his or her
official duties.
This ethics code does have one valuable and unusual provision:
- Restrictions on Legal Representation: The
Wind Company shall not agree to pay legal fees for any Municipal
Officer or Municipality in connection with any investigation by any law
enforcement agency.
At first blush, one would think that this was dealt with in the
gifts provision, but the payment of legal fees could be included in an
agreement. Good thinking!
I hope that the AG's office will take a second look at this ethics
code, in light of my criticisms and those of others. The ethics code
was a great idea, but it would be nice to have a great ethics code, as
well.
Robert Wechsler
Director of Research-Retired, City Ethics
---
- Robert Wechsler's blog
- Log in or register to post comments