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Conflicts of Interest
421 articles

Conflicts of Interest

Conflicts of Interest February 1, 2011

How Massachusetts Handles Favors and Favoritism

In my recent blog posts about Gwinnett County, especially the first, I spoke about how the problem of not following formal processes is a serious government ethics problem, but is often not covered by ethics codes. The Massachusetts Ethics Commission has recently entered into disposition agreements…
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Conflicts of Interest January 28, 2011

The Need for a Revolving Door Provision, and More, in Hartford

According to an article in Tuesday's Hartford Advocate, a complaint has been filed with Hartford's ethics commission by a council member against the former corporation counsel on the grounds that he had taken a job with a law firm that had received hundreds of thousands of dollars in contracts over…
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Conflicts of Interest January 25, 2011

Separating the Personal from the Public: Two Examples

Alabama's new governor, Robert Bentley, said last week in a speech that people who do not accept Jesus as their savior are not his brother or his sister. Leaving the religious aspects of this aside, there are two important government ethics issues here, one involving preferential treatment and the …
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Conflicts of Interest January 7, 2011

Local Government Employees Sitting on Councils

An editorial in yesterday's Star Press of east central Indiana calls for passage of a state law to prevent municipal employees from sitting on a body that oversees their department or agency's budget. The focus is primarily on preventing city and county workers from sitting on city and county counc…
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Conflicts of Interest January 5, 2011

Vendor Codes of Conduct Sound Better Than They Are

Local government vendor or supplier codes of conduct are not commonly found in the U.S. In a limited search, I couldn't find one. But corporations commonly have them, as do some Canadian cities and some states and state agencies. And they sound like a good idea. The reason I raise this idea is that…
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Conflicts of Interest December 29, 2010

A Local Government Association Board Member's Possible Conflicts

According to an article yesterday on seacoastonline.com, a committee of the Select Board of North Hampton, NH (pop. 4,500) brought to the Select Board its concern about the town administrator dealing with health insurance issues when he was on the board of the state's Local Government Center, a loc…
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Conflicts of Interest December 24, 2010

Conflicts and Fraud

If "conflict of interest" were a cause of action, what would it be? A matter right in the small city next to my town answers this question, and gives a new angle by which to view conflicts. According to court documents cited (and linked to) by an article in the New Haven Register this week, in 2009…
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Conflicts of Interest December 21, 2010

A Gift Exception That Undermines the Rule

My last blog post involved the Baltimore Employees' Retirement System board calling in an image consultant to help protect it from an investigation by the city's ethics board. This blog post will look at why there is an investigation (again, I could not find any minutes posted, so I am dependent on…
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Conflicts of Interest December 16, 2010

In Baltimore County, A Chinese Wall Is Not the Answer

Chinese walls, that is, ways to separate an official from a matter as to which he has a conflict, are a perfect way to appear to be responsibly handling a series of possible conflicts, but are these walls great or are they window dressing? And even if the walls truly work, are they enough to deal r…
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Conflicts of Interest December 15, 2010

Soft Landings and Other Revolving Door Matters

The COGEL conference last week had an excellent panel on the revolving door between government and business. One thing I learned is that the first post-employment laws were passed in the 1850s and 1860s, and they involved lawyers, a group that often argues that ethics laws should not apply to them …
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