Complicity and Knowledge
Broad Responsibility for Ethical Misconduct
Robert Wechsler
A couple of weeks ago, in
a City and State column, veteran NYC reporter Wayne Barrett
hit the nail on the head regarding the responsibility for failures
to deal responsibly with conflicts of interest, specifically with
respect to the conviction of former state assembly speaker Sheldon
Silver, a Democrat:
What to Do About "Machers"
Robert Wechsler
Earlier this month, a bill came before the Israeli legislature, the
Knesset, called the Machers Bill. Its goal is to expand the
Knesset's lobbying law to the executive branch as well as to
municipalities, something that is rare in American states.
Police Officers' Failure to Report Criminal Activity for Their Own Personal Interest
Robert Wechsler
According to an
article in the New York Times this week, dozens of New York
City, as well as Nassau and Suffolk County, police officers were
arrested for grand larceny relating to a scheme to fraudulently get
disability pensions through Social Security. It is somewhat like the
Long Island Railroad disability scam I wrote about in a 2008 blog post.
How and Why to Bring Budget Transparency to a City Near You
Robert Wechsler
It's a nice coincidence that, just when I was preparing to write a
blog post about a trendy thing in the corporate world called
"open-book management," the former comptroller of Dixon, IL, Rita
Crundwell, pleaded guilty to a federal fraud charge that she
siphoned more than $53 million from the town of only 16,000 people
(over a period of 21 years), according to an
article in the Chicago Tribune.
Fire, Smoke, and Snowballs
Robert Wechsler
It's valuable to put government ethics in the larger context of the
use of public office for private purposes that does not involve a
financial benefit for anyone. In other words, much of politics is
personal. A
review in this weekend's New York Times Book Review got me
thinking about this.
Questioning the Assumption of An Official's Sole Responsibility for Ethics Violations
Robert Wechsler
It is assumed in government ethics enforcement that an official who
mishandles a conflict situation is solely responsible for her
misconduct. This assumption is rarely questioned. The official might
have received no training, or poor training. The official might not
have been encouraged to seek advice; in fact, she might not have had
access to professional ethics advice from anyone, or only from a
city attorney who was an important player from the other political
party.
Treating Inmates as Commodities in Louisiana Is a Local Government Ethics Problem
Robert Wechsler
Louisiana Incarcerated is an
investigative series that ran recently in the New Orleans
Times-Picayune. It is a story rooted in an extremely poor ethics environment
that, despite vaunted ethics reforms (that many, including me, have
criticized), does not seem to have changed.
The series has introduced into popular culture the term "honey hole," one sheriff's description of the cells in his prison, which is the sheriff's biggest revenue generator.
The series has introduced into popular culture the term "honey hole," one sheriff's description of the cells in his prison, which is the sheriff's biggest revenue generator.
Two Aspects of a Poor Ethics Environment
Robert Wechsler
I never know where I'm going to find something that inspires a
blog post on local government ethics. This time it was an
essay by Tim Parks in the March 8 issue of the New York Review
of Books, as well as on the NYRBlog.
The Ethics of Vote Trading
Robert Wechsler
As I near the end of writing my local government ethics book, I am going
over local government ethics codes looking for unusual, but valuable
provisions to include in a special section that follows my discussion of the
run-of-the-mill provisions.
I would like to share one of these provisions that is truly worth thinking about. It appears in the Windsor, CO ethics code:
I would like to share one of these provisions that is truly worth thinking about. It appears in the Windsor, CO ethics code:
Nonviolence and Government Ethics VII – Seeking Order
Robert Wechsler
Seeking Order in Government
All government officials seek order, not just in the sense of law and order, but also in the sense of having everyone know their roles, their authority, and their relationships to other individuals and agencies.
Nonviolent actors seek order in societies where some kinds of disorder are taken for granted, for example, in dictatorships that have usurped authority and destroyed relationships.
All government officials seek order, not just in the sense of law and order, but also in the sense of having everyone know their roles, their authority, and their relationships to other individuals and agencies.
Nonviolent actors seek order in societies where some kinds of disorder are taken for granted, for example, in dictatorships that have usurped authority and destroyed relationships.