Advisory Opinions
Negative Conflicts of Interest
Robert Wechsler
Conflicts of interest are not always positive, any more than
relationships are always positive. And conflicts are based on
relationships.
We tend to think of an official using his position to help a family member or business associate. But sometimes officials use their position to harm someone with whom they have a negative relationship, anyone from a former in-law (the bum who dumped my sister) or current in-law (that woman who's driving my brother crazy) to a former business partner or a major business competitor.
We tend to think of an official using his position to help a family member or business associate. But sometimes officials use their position to harm someone with whom they have a negative relationship, anyone from a former in-law (the bum who dumped my sister) or current in-law (that woman who's driving my brother crazy) to a former business partner or a major business competitor.
The Need for Institutional Checks on Mishandling Conflicts
Robert Wechsler
Six years ago, I wrote a
blog post on apology (including full disclosure) in the
medical context. Today's
New York Times' "Invitation to a Dialogue" letter from a
hospital executive takes this issue a step further to a
consideration of the value of individual punishment vs.
institutional change. The lesson he provides is one that is important to government ethics, as well.
No Enforcement Against the Complicit in a California Case
Robert Wechsler
Court decisions, especially when combined with criminal enforcement
of ethics violations, can be very harmful to local government ethics. The court in a Monterey County case involving a serious §1090
conflict of interest matter that officials were not only aware of,
but appear to have helped create, has used two recent California
court decisions to limit prosecution to just one official.
A Miscellany
Robert Wechsler
Who Should Oversee Nepotism Rules?
Increased EC Authority and Access to Annual Disclosure in California
Robert Wechsler
Some good news from California, which takes an odd, hybrid approach
to local government ethics. It has a state ethics commission (the
Fair Political Practices Commission (FPPC)) that has limited
authority over local officials in the areas of conflicts of interest
and campaign finance. And the state has many local government ethics
programs, which are all over the place in terms of quality and areas
over which they have authority.
EC Members and Ethics Advice
Robert Wechsler
Is it too much to ask that an ethics commission member lead the way,
set an example, with respect to the single most important aspect of
a government ethics program: ethics advice?
An Entertaining Film About the Mishandling of a Conflict Situation
Robert Wechsler
When I put in the DVD yesterday evening, I did not expect the movie
Admission (2013; written by Karen Croner, based on a novel by Jean
Hanff Korelitz, starring Tina Fey and Paul Rudd) to be a revelatory
movie about the mishandling of conflicts of interest situations. But it is. Not in government (it's about a university admissions employee), but
the situations are easily applicable.
Summer Reading: Richard Painter on Ethics Reform II
Robert Wechsler
This is the second of three posts on how Richard W. Painter's recommendations for federal ethics reform in his book, Getting
the Government America Deserves: How Ethics Reform Can Make a
Difference (Oxford U.P., 2009), may be applied to local government ethics programs.
Rulemaking
Rulemaking
Summer Reading: Richard Painter on Ethics Reform I
Robert Wechsler
Richard W. Painter's Getting
the Government America Deserves: How Ethics Reform Can Make a
Difference (Oxford U.P., 2009) may be about the federal
executive branch ethics program, but this excellent book also has a lot
to offer to local government ethics. This is the first of three blog
posts about this book, focusing on Painter's recommendations for
ethics reform and how they could be applied to local government
ethics programs.
Contractors et al.
Contractors et al.
Ethics Advice, Power, and Ideology
Robert Wechsler
Within Election Law Center blogger Christian Adams' recent ad hominem attack on me is an idea that is worth
discussing. He said that, in requiring candidate committees to come
to me for permission (what is commonly referred to as "ethics
advice") when I was the administrator of a public campaign financing
program, I was displaying a "joy" and "love" of power. Does this
advisory relationship actually involve
power?