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Safra Working Papers

September 8, 2010

Jacksonville's Charter Review Commission

The Jacksonville City Council's Sub-Committee on the Charter Review Commission's (which only meets every 10 years) findings met yesterday 07-09-2010 to hear public testimony on any aspects of the CRC's findings. There were about 20 people who spoke, and all but one were there to encourage the committee to implement the Jacksonville Ethics Commissions recommendations regarding inclusion of the Ethics Commission in the city's charter.
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Ethics Codes & Reform December 3, 2007

Jacksonville's Recent Ethics Code Revisions

Jacksonville's Ethics Commission recently went through a two year revision process of their City's Ethics Code. The resulting updates were finally ratified by the City Council last Tuesday night. See the Times Union article below... Note that I will get the code revisions up in a separate blog entry later.

From: http://www.jacksonville.com/tu-online/stories/113007/opl_221526913.shtml.

The Florida Times-Union

November 30, 2007

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January 17, 2012

Jacksonville.com - above the fold...

What’s missing from new Jacksonville ethics office? Money

No budget or staff yet, despite being adopted by City Council last summer.

Posted: January 17, 2012

Seven months after it was signed into law, Jacksonville’s Office of Ethics, Compliance and Oversight still has no budget. Its one employee, a director appointed last month, works part-time but hasn’t drawn a city paycheck since leaving an earlier job in October.

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March 12, 2008

Jefferson County, Alabama - Charitable and Not-So Charitable Giving by Contractors Leads to Disaster

How harmful can it be for a potential contractor to give money to the favored charities of someone who oversees a county’s finances?
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Transparency & Disclosure December 15, 2009

Jersey City Ethics Audit re Development Process

This summer, several New Jersey local government officials were arrested in a big FBI sting operation (see my blog post). Yesterday, an ethics audit focused on development practices was released. Requested by the Jersey City council, it was written by three members of a New Jersey law firm.
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February 22, 2008

John McCain and Me, and You

Last year, soon after I contracted to act as Administrator to the New Haven Democracy Fund, a new public campaign financing program, the Executive Director of Connecticut Common Cause called me (I sat on the board of CT Common Cause). He said that he had been asked to write a report about the Fund for the national office. My response was that I had to write a report to the State Elections Enforcement Commission, so why should he bother to write another? My report could serve both needs. He wanted me to resign from the board, and I thought that was silly.
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November 20, 2009

Join the Club?

When people support ethics programs that feature toothless enforcement, reel off the names of the countries that support toothless enforcement of the UN Convention against Corruption (according to an article in this week's Economist):

        Algeria
        Angola
        China
        Egypt
        Iran
        Pakistan
        Russia
        Venezuela
        Zimbabwe
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May 19, 2015

Jonathan Haidt

Jonathan Haidt is the Thomas Cooley Professor of Ethical Leadership at New York University's Stern School of Business. He is a social psychologist who studies morality, emotion, and culture.  

I would highly recommend his book: The Happiness Hypothesis: Finding Modern Truth in Ancient Wisdom

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May 1, 2009

Judge Allows Employees to Vote for Boss as Mayor in Chicago Heights

Two days ago, I wrote about a Chicago Heights (IL) situation where two council members who work under a third council member were in a position to vote for their boss to be the city's mayor. A suit brought by a group of local ministers to prevent this from happening was dismissed, according to an article in yesterday's Neighborhood Star.
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December 3, 2012

Judicial Dismissal of Toronto's Mayor

Between the American Thanksgiving holiday and throwing out my back so that I couldn't sit at my computer, I missed one of the most fascinating stories of the year:  a judicial dismissal of Toronto's mayor for a conflict of interest violation. The conflict situation was minor, but the way the mayor handled it and the way Toronto's ethics laws relating to council members, including
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Enforcement & Complaints November 27, 2006

Judicial Review of Ethics Commission Decisions

This is the place to share your opinions of and experiences with judicial review of Ethics Commission decisions. For example, who should be able to seek judicial review: complainants, respondents, other interested parties, anyone? Are there situations where judicial review is inappropriate, too expensive (where there is nothing but a reprimand)? Should there be judicial review of alleged procedural irregularities?

216. Judicial Review.

Any person or entity aggrieved by a decision of the Ethics Commission may seek judicial review and relief pursuant to ----- of [state law].
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September 10, 2009

Juggling Two Types of Ethics Reform in DuPage County (IL)

DuPage County, IL, a county of nearly a million people just outside Chicago (its largest town is Naperville), is juggling two ethics ordinance revision processes, one for the county, the other for the county election commission. Both appear to have attracted some controversy.

County Ethics Ordinance
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Local Government Practice September 18, 2009

Jurisdiction and Oversight Over Nonprofits Doing Local Government Work

Privatizing local government functions can cause conflict of interest problems, but at least contractors can be held to contracts and replaced when they run afoul of ethics or other laws or requirements. The same is not necessarily true when non-profit organizations take over local government functions not as contractors or grant recipients (as with social service agencies), but as partial or full replacements.
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October 17, 2013

Jurisdiction Over a Mayor-Elect, and Misconduct Disclaimers

There are two interesting wrinkles in the Forest Park, GA case I wrote about in the last blog post. According to an article in the Clayton News Daily last Friday, a former Forest Park public works director alleged in an ethics complaint that, in an e-mail message, the mayor had illegally ordered the then city manager to remove him.
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Enforcement & Complaints August 7, 2013

Jursdiction, Nepotism, Retaliation, and Independence

Yesterday, Oregon's Statesman Journal reported an interesting case that involves a number of important government ethics issues.

The state's Department of Corrections (DOC) deputy director allegedly used his position to influence an Oregon Corrections Enterprises (OCE) administrator into hiring his son and later giving him a higher salary and increased moving expenses.
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Ethics Codes & Reform July 31, 2007

Justification and Its Effect on Ethical Reasoning

One of the 'latest things' in politics today is Drew Westen, a psych professor who advises the Democrats that they should be paying more attention to emotions than to policies (as, many say, the Republicans have been doing), because people's emotional reactions have a great effect on how they vote. What is the implication for ethics of what Westen and his colleagues are saying?
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January 27, 2006

K Street's New Ways Spawn More Pork

washingtonpost.com
As Barriers With Lawmakers Fall, 'Earmarks' Grow

By Jonathan Weisman and Charles R. Babcock
Washington Post Staff Writers
Friday, January 27, 2006; A01

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April 18, 2012

Kansas City (MO) Takes a Big Step Toward Ethics Reform

According to the blog of Kansas City, MO's mayor, Sly James, the KC Commission on Ethics Reform will be holding a public hearing tomorrow on its draft ethics code.
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Conflicts of Interest November 26, 2010

Kickbacks and Local Government Ethics

I find it fascinating that, although kickbacks (also known as "thanks giving") are one of the central elements of unethical conduct in local governments, I have only mentioned them three times in my blog posts.
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July 12, 2012

Knowledge, Fear of Retaliation, and Ethics Commission Selection Issues in D.C.

According to an article in yesterday's Washington Post, new allegations have been made of a "shadow campaign" by which the District of Columbia's largest contractor (in contract dollars) supported the current mayor's 2010 campaign to the tune of about 650,000 unreported dollars.
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Pagination

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