Grading the Nation: How accountable is your state?
The tales are sadly familiar to even the most casual observer of state
politics.
In Georgia,
more than 650 government employees accepted gifts from vendors doing business
with the state in 2007 and 2008, clearly violating state ethics law. The last
time the state issued a penalty on a vendor was 1999.
A North
Carolina legislator sponsored and voted on a bill to loosen regulations on
billboard construction, even though he co-owned five billboards in the state.
When the ethics commission reviewed the case, it found no conflict; after all,
the panel reasoned, the legislation would benefit all billboard owners in the
state — not just the lawmaker who pushed for the bill.
Tennessee
established its ethics commission six years ago, but has yet to issue a single
ethics penalty. It’s almost impossible to know whether the oversight is
effectively working, because complaints are not made available to the
public.
A West
Virginia governor borrowed a car from his local dealership to take it for a
“test drive.” He kept the car for four years, during which the dealership won
millions in state contracts.
When representatives of a biotech company took Montana
legislators out to dinner, they neither registered as lobbyists nor reported the
fact that they picked up the bill. They didn’t have to — the law only requires
registration upon spending $2,400 during a legislative session. And in Maine, one state
senator did not disclose $98 million in state contracts that went to an
organization for which he served as executive director. The lack of disclosure
was not an oversight; due to a loophole in state law, he was under no obligation
to do so.
The stories go on and on. Open records laws with hundreds of exemptions.
Crucial budgeting decisions made behind closed doors by a handful of power
brokers. “Citizen” lawmakers voting on bills that would benefit them directly.
Scores of legislators turning into lobbyists seemingly overnight. Disclosure
laws without much disclosure. Ethics panels that haven’t met in years.
See the rest here
No comments:
Post a Comment