City Related
Supreme Court Justices and Their Campaign Contributions: Can Justice Be Purchased?
<i>Articles have been written putting into question the study on which the following blog entry was based.
Commercial Bail Bond System: Local Corruption and Ends vs. Rules
The most important division in ethics is between ends-based approaches (consequentialist or teleological, best known as "the ends justify the means") and rules-based approaches (deontological).
The most important problem for individuals in government is that we are taught rules-based approaches while we’re growing up (“Do unto others as you would have them do unto you”), but in government most talk is in terms of ends (Will it raise taxes?).
Transparency -- Another Disaster Shows Us How Important It Is
Transparency is often seen as a technical, often annoying part of municipal ethics. All those notices and agendas that have to be filed at the right time in the right place, all those document requests from the news media and opposition parties. Is all this really necessary for good government? Does it lower taxes, provide better services? Or is it just a pain in the neck?
Sometimes you need a big disaster – Enron, for example – for people to understand the cost of not acting ethically.
Municipal Governments Can Grow Up, Too
Has your city’s government grown up yet, ethically speaking?
This isn't as silly a question as it sounds. All of us develop morally, just as we develop physically and intellectually and emotionally. We just don’t see our height grow or get university degrees or get married and have children, ethically speaking.
New angle for Conflicts of Interest & Campaign Finance
In a very interesting step recently, the "<i>Zionsville Town Council approved 5-0 Monday, Dec. 3, an expanded <a href="http://www.timessentinel.com/local/local_story_339174630.html">conflict of interest policy</a> that includes a clause urging council members to recuse themselves from any vote involving a campaign contributor.</i>"
How Much Expertise Is Too Much?
It is natural for a current or former firefighter to be interested in serving on a fire commission, or a current or former teacher in serving on a school board. But is there an ongoing conflict of interest in doing so?
The question arose on the Milford, Connecticut school board recently. Three members are former school teachers who held union leadership positions.
<a href="http://www.cityethics.org/node/350">Click here to read the rest of this blog entry.</a>
Campaign Finance and Favoritism Issues Involving Politicians' Charities
It seems so mean-spirited to talk about the conflicts of interest that arise from politicians’ charitable activities, but <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/20/us/politics/20clinton.html?_r=1&adxnn… revelations about the Clinton Foundation</a> show, in big numbers, what happens so often, in smaller numbers, across the country.
City staffers get ethics introduction
The Jacksonville Daily Record today <a href="http://www.jaxdailyrecord.com/showstory.php?Story_id=48985" target="_blank">published a story</a> covering the first ethics training since the new code revisions were ratified by Council on Tuesday last week.
"<cite>Miller instructed the Council staff not to get too bogged down in the technicalities of the law, but to adopt an overall ethical mind set to help guide their decision-making.</cite>"
Press: Daily Record Article - 6 December 2007
<h2>City staffers get ethics introduction</h2>
<p>From: <a href="http://www.jaxdailyrecord.com/showstory.php?Story_id=48985" target="_blank">http://www.jaxdailyrecord.com/showstory.php?Story_id=48985</a><br />
Jacksonville's Recent Ethics Code Revisions
Jacksonville's Ethics Commission recently went through a two year revision process of their City's Ethics Code.
The resulting updates were finally ratified by the City Council last Tuesday night. See the Times Union article below... Note that I will get the code revisions up in a separate blog entry later.