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- ETHICS, Page 70Where Angelenos Fear to Tread
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- A panel proposes the toughest guidelines yet for city employees
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- When Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley appointed a special
- commission in April to come up with a new city ethics code,
- critics dismissed it as a face-saving device. After all, Bradley
- had just narrowly won re-election after a campaign that centered
- on his alleged ethical lapses -- including his serving as a paid
- adviser to two banks that did business with the city. But last
- week the seven-member panel proved it was no rubber stamp. It
- proposed a code of conduct for city employees and elected
- officials that may be the most stringent in the country.
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- The code would outlaw all outside earned income, including
- honorariums, for decision-making officials. Former officials
- could not lobby city departments for one year after leaving the
- payroll, and would be permanently barred from acting as
- lobbyists or advocates on matters directly related to their
- government employment. Candidates for city office would be
- forbidden to raise campaign funds until nine months before an
- election, and partial public funding would be available for
- hopefuls who agreed to spending limits.
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- The most sweeping of the panel's 30 recommendations concern
- financial disclosure. Elected officials, high-ranking civil
- servants and candidates for city office would have to make
- public the exact amount of their income and investments,
- including their homes, and even list the names of their
- stockbrokers. Lobbyists who received more than $1,000 a year to
- influence city officials would have to disclose their
- transactions each quarter. Taken together, the proposed
- regulations could affect as many as 1,500 of Los Angeles' 45,000
- employees, as well as an undetermined number of lobbyists and
- candidates.
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- The panel urged creation of an independent watchdog agency
- with the power to impose civil fines of up to $5,000, or as much
- as three times the amount involved in a violation. Keeping city
- officials aboveboard will not be cheap. The additional
- personnel, office space for housing the mountain of new
- disclosure forms, matching public campaign funds and mandatory
- ethics training for every city department are expected to cost
- between $2 million and $4 million a year.
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- Unlike the ethics and pay legislation passed by Congress
- earlier this month, the Los Angeles proposals do not make up
- for banned outside income with salary increases. This leads
- some critics to wonder whether many Angelenos, faced with
- relatively low city wages and the prospect of having to reveal
- their most intimate financial affairs, won't avoid public
- service if the code goes into effect. Says Michael Harmon, a
- professor of public administration at George Washington
- University: "The implicit message is one of distrust."
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- Bradley, who is under investigation by state and federal
- agencies for possible conflict-of-interest and insider-trading
- violations, pledged to work for passage of the code by the city
- council. But that body is writing its own ethics rules and is
- said to be lukewarm toward the recommendations. Even if the
- council balks, however, the commission has vowed to take its
- proposals to the voters as a ballot initiative, which may assure
- victory since Californians tend to approve such measures. Once
- enacted, Los Angeles' no-nonsense ethics rules could become the
- model for municipalities like New York City and Chicago, whose
- current guidelines are not as tough. Says Bruce Jennings, an
- associate at the Hastings Center, an ethics institute in
- Briarcliff Manor, N.Y.: "Cities will see the Los Angeles code
- as a bellwether for what the public expects of government
- officials."
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