City Related
Fundraising for a Political Convention: Pay to Play, Transparency, and a Blind Spot
Robert Wechsler
Even the most enthusiastic good government politicians often have a
serious blind spot: themselves. They believe that everyone
else is into pay to play and selling out to big contributors. But
not them. They're only doing what's best for their city. They
have only the community's best interests in mind. And sometimes the
community needs those big contributors, and who but he is best
situated to get them to open their wallets? However, the big
contributors don't have the same blind spot, so they don't want the
public to know how much they're shelling out.
Lobbying Oversight Programs Are Hot in Canada
Robert Wechsler
When it comes to local lobbying oversight, cities are falling like
flies. At least in Canada.
A Uniformed Union Fiefdom in NYC
Robert Wechsler
I've written several posts about individuals who have created
fiefdoms (a
D.A., a
housing authority director, a city
pension board attorney, the director
of a council of local governmen
Local Officials Officiating at Restricted Sources' Weddings
Robert Wechsler
According to an
article yesterday on the Baltimore Brew website, a
year ago Baltimore's mayor officiated at a wedding between two
individuals who lobby the city government. In Las Vegas, no less.
Mayors, judges and, sometimes, other local government officials often officiate at weddings. Some ethics codes have a special exception from the gift ban that allows for this, but most make no mention of it.
Mayors, judges and, sometimes, other local government officials often officiate at weddings. Some ethics codes have a special exception from the gift ban that allows for this, but most make no mention of it.
Ethics Reform in Tallahassee, Rejection of Election Overspending by Big Contra Costa Employer
Robert Wechsler
Two big local ethics/election stories come from Contra
Costa, CA and Tallahassee, FL.
Ethics Reform Package Features a Different Sort of Public Campaign Financing Program
Ethics Reform Package Features a Different Sort of Public Campaign Financing Program
Poor Contractor Contingency Fee Incentives
Robert Wechsler
The last time I
discussed contingency fee arrangements in local government
contracting was 2007 (the focus then was on attorneys). A
front-page story in today's New York Times shows
clearly that I have not been giving this topic the attention it
deserves.
How a Huge Corporation's Political Spending Can Change a City's Ethics Environment
Robert Wechsler
In the last few years, one of the biggest topics in the general area
of government ethics, including campaign finance, lobbying, and
transparency, has been the effect of huge campaign contributions by
corporations and billionaires, which has become increasingly doable pursuant
to a series of U.S. Supreme Court decisions.
Corruption Surrounding the Building of Barriers in Venice, Italy
Robert Wechsler
The former chair of the Venice in Peril Fund wrote a
disturbing piece for the September 25 issue of the New York
Review of Books about corruption in Venice. This
corruption derived largely from a major project: the building of
flood protection barriers, known as MOSE. Although this project was
larger than those in most cities, the misuse of funds, the failure
to competitively bid, the false invoicing, the nepotism and the
cronyism are no different.
Chicago: Legislative IG and Mayoral Travel
Robert Wechsler
Chicago's Legislative IG
How Preferential Treatment Toward Municipal Employees and Contractors Can Affect Elections
Robert Wechsler
Ferguson, MO — where Michael Brown was recently killed by a police
officer, and the police department's first reaction was to protect
the officer and keep the facts secret — is an unusual case of a
local government where a scandal is likely to actually increase
rather than decrease citizen participation in government.