North Carolina Enters the Dark Ages
North Carolina's 2006 state ethics reform turned out the lights, according to <a href="http://www.charlotteobserver.com/217/story/48278.html">an article in yesterday's Charlotte <i>Observer</i></a>. The new system provides that there will be no public hearings before the new state ethics commission unless the accused asks for one. In many cases, when a case is dismissed or a reprimand is given, no one will ever know.
Charitable Fundraising as an End Run Around Ethics Laws
Lobbyists, lawmakers, and charitable fundraising form a triangle that is both virtuous and harmful.
Community leaders like to be identified with charitable groups, and charitable groups like to be identified with community leaders. It's a natural combination. But what is not natural, or even easy to see, is the line between charitable fundraising and campaign fundraising, when lobbyists, contractors, and developers enter into the picture.
Lack of a (moral?) compass?
The fact is that there is a failure on the part of the educational system to establish the differences between ethics, morals and justice. We expect the courts to provide justice, we deplore the lack of morals, but we as a group do not understand or apply or discuss ethics. Ethics, from the Greek "Ethos" or reason, had been the gold standard for educated minds since before the Reformation, but even the discussion of ethics is now seen to be a matter for university professors only and has departed from the general public as something of serious import.
Municipal Attorneys' Conflicting Obligations: A Case Study
Here's a difficult case involving a board of education's attorney.
The board of education in a wealthy, medium-sized Connecticut town is represented by a large law firm that represents 80 boards of education across the state (half the state's total). That same firm is representing a developer that is suing the town's planning and zoning commission, and it appears to be a controversial matter.
Quotation of the Week
<i>With the first quotation of the week, let's start at the beginning:</i>
We become just by doing just acts. -Aristotle
Some Weak Defenses of Conflicts in the News This Week
<b>Understatement</b>: After one county district attorney recused himself from prosecuting the man who hired him for his job, the neighboring county district attorney accepted the case, despite the fact that he leased office space and had accepted a thousand-dollar campaign contribution from the suspect's nephew, who happened to be listed as the suspect's defense attorney. 'To suggest that that's a conflict of interest is to suggest that I have an integrity problem, which is simply not the case,' said the D.A.
Logical Fallacies I: The Ad Hominem Attack
It is difficult to be an ethical politician or administrator, or even a citizen, without a basic understanding of logic. It is also difficult to appreciate others' unethical conduct without a basic understanding of logic.
By logic I do not mean the opposite of irrationality, but rather critical thinking, and specifically an understanding of logical fallacies. Logical fallacies are probably the most frequent form of unethical conduct in municipal government. They involve the conscious or unconscious attempt to falsely persuade or manipulate people.
Conflicting Public Service Obligations
My blog entries must often seem like attacks on business interests. One reason is that conflicts are usually about personal financial interests conflicting with a government official's obligations to the public, and our democratic values require that the official's fiduciary obligations take precedence. And where there are financial interests, there are usually businesses.
Top Ten Ethics Films
<p><img src="files/Top10Films.png" /></p>
<p>We have been batting this around for a while, and have come up with the following list:</p>
<h2>The Top Ten BEST ETHICS Movies of all time</h2>
<h3>1. Man for All Seasons</h3>
<p>Paul Scofield brilliantly plays Thomas More who stands up for his principals against the ultimate difficult boss, King Henry VIIII. In the end, he dies for his faith and his principals, but he gets to become the patron saint of lawyers.</p>
Proximity Rules
Some towns have proximity rules, that is, rules that require officials to recuse themselves from any matter dealing with property within a certain distance of property they own or rent. But it is hard to have a set number of feet or yards. A distance appropriate to an urban environment is very different from one appropriate to a rural environment.