City Related
Shorstein: lobbyist rules should be enforced
<p>04/16/2008<br />
by <b>David Chapman</b><br />
Staff Writer<br />
From: http://www.jaxdailyrecord.com/showstory.php?Story_id=49846</p>
<p>As of Tuesday, discussions between the City Ethics Commission and Office of
General Counsel were ongoing about how to handle the issue of 10 area lobbyists
not in compliance with new code requirements regarding disclosure of clients.
Scientists Lead the Way to Refusing Honoraria
Many municipal codes of ethics, including the <a href="http://www.cityethics.org/mc/full#TOC46" target="”_blank”">City Ethics Model Code (Section 100(15))</a>, contain a provision prohibiting the acceptance of fees and honoraria for articles, appearances, or speeches.
How Entitled Should Voter Registration Employees Feel?
People use sunshine laws to retaliate against political opponents (it’s easy to find technical violations and use them to show an opponent is not being open; and you don’t even have to find them: newspapers write up baseless allegations just the same).
New city ethics regulations face first challenges
<img src="http://mdjacksonville.112.2O7.net/b/ss/mdjacksonville/1/G.5--NS/0" height="1" width="1" border="0" alt="" />
<p>This story can be found on Jacksonville.com at
Folio Weekly - rock and a harden place
<p>Date posted: 2008-11-04<br />
<b>From:</b> http://www.folioweekly.com/folioblog/?p=723</p>
The Duties of Ethics Board Members: The Bad Example of Detroit
Do ethics board members have a duty to follow more than the letter of their ethics code?
Eastern Oregon Takes on Government Transparency
Financial disclosure scares citizens away from sitting on local boards and commissions. This is the “fact” stated every time any level of financial disclosure is discussed. In my state, Connecticut, all the financial disclosure that was required in a recent bill was the name of one’s employer, and yet the Connecticut Conference of Municipalities opposed it with the same old canard.
The Hatch Act's Restrictions on Running for Local Government Office
There is one local government conflict of interest that is often ignored because it was created at the federal level by a federal statute. The statute is known as <a href="http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/html/uscode05/usc_sup_01_5_10_II_30_1…; target="”_blank”">the Hatch Act of 1939</a> (Title 5, Subchapter III), originally known as An Act to Prevent Pernicious Political Activities (they don’t make statute names like they used to).
Transparency vs. Fear
New York politicians are making life hard for ethical politicians. “Present yourself as ethical,” they are effectively telling them, “and everyone will be harder on you when you don’t live up to expectations. Better to create no expectations at all.”
This isn’t what the government ethics community wants to hear.
HUD Secretary Seems to Have Developed Urban Ethics Problems
Not all municipal ethics problems arise from a municipality. One place where there is a great deal of opportunity for municipal misconduct is the Department of Housing and Urban Development in Washington, D.C. (HUD)
HUD oversees and funds housing authorities across the country. It gets involved, directly and indirectly, in land and development deals and contracts.