While we're in Nevada, there's another interesting case before the
state's ethics commission that has ramifications for local government
ethics. According to an
article in the Las Vegas Review-Journal, a probable cause hearing
was to be conducted by one Democratic and one Republican commission
member. When it turned out that the case had been brought by the
executive director of the state Democratic party committee (against...
It's only been a few months since the Louisiana state court
decision that applied the constitutional Speech and Debate Clause
to remove state legislators from the state ethics commission's
jurisdiction, and already a similar case has
been filed in Nevada. In my
blog entry on the Louisiana...
According to an
article in yesterday's Baltimore Sun,
the Baltimore County Council narrowly failed in its attempt to change
the county charter to allow council members to work for the state of
Maryland. Five of seven council members voted for the charter amendment
(the charter currently forbids this), including one who "inadvertently"
worked for the state for five...
According to an
article in today's Denton (TX) Record-Chronicle, the Denton (pop.
106,000) council voted 4-2, with the mayor recusing himself, to give
the city's tax collection contract to the mayor's law firm (he is one
of two partners in the four-lawyer firm).
The firm had the contract before its partner was elected mayor, but the
contract ran...
Back in May, I wrote
about the conflict of interest problems in upstate New York local
governments due to the development of wind farms in the area. This
week, New York's Attorney General, Andrew Cuomo, issued a Wind Industry
Ethics Code to deal with these problems. Hats off to Cuomo for the
idea, although not for the execution.
Back in June, I did a
blog entry on the implications for local governments of a Louisiana
decision that applied the Speech and Debate Clause to ethics
investigations and decisions, effectively preventing state ethics
commissions from investigating or enforcing ethics laws against state
legislators, even if they voted for the ethics provision involved.