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13 results for “ethics code” · other

  • How to Request Advisory Opinion 2022

    Scranton, PA
    Other

    The document provides procedures for requesting an Advisory Opinion from the City of Scranton Board of Ethics, located at 340 N. Washington Avenue. Advisory Opinions, available only to public officials and City employees, address questions about the Code of Ethics and its provisions. Requests must include the requestor's name, position, email, and a detailed description of the question or potential conflict of interest, and should be signed and dated before emailing to Board Solicitor Jamie Davis Schelling (jschelling@wglaw.com) and Board Chair David Falchek (dfalchek@gmail.com). The form explicitly states that requests should not address violations already occurring or completed; those issues are handled through a separate complaint process.

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  • Ethics Board Complaint Form

    Scranton, PA
    Other

The City of Scranton Board of Ethics Complaint Form provides the procedural mechanism for filing ethics violations against city officials and employees. Complaints must identify the respondent by name and position, provide detailed allegations tied specifically to violations of Article VII (Code of Ethics) of the City of Scranton Administrative Code, and include supporting documentation; incomplete forms will not be processed. The complaint must be notarized and sent to the Board at P.O. Box 668, Scranton, PA 18501. The Ethics Law protects complainants from retaliation under Section 9 and keeps all Board proceedings and investigation records confidential under Section 10 until the Board issues a final determination, at which point the final order becomes public record once appeal rights are exhausted.

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  • Redlining in Evanston

    Evanston, IL
    Other

    This document traces the history of racial discrimination and housing segregation in Evanston, Illinois from 1860 to 1958. Key developments include Illinois repealing its 1853 act barring Black residency in 1865, though Evanston adopted Jim Crow policies between 1900 and the 1930s through exclusionary tactics and racial covenants prohibiting home sales to non-Caucasians. In 1920–1927, Chicago attorney Nathan MacChesney drafted a Code of Ethics addition forbidding realtors from introducing members of other races into certain neighborhoods and created a model racially restrictive covenant targeting "Colored" people for the Chicago Real Estate Board. The 1930 Home Owners Loan Corporation residential security maps graded lending risks across over 200 cities, with Evanston's Fifth Ward designated as redlined (D2 rating), based partly on HOLC statements characterizing Black population growth as "quite a serious problem." By 1948, a mass meeting addressed the city's failure to provide housing for Black residents, and a 1948 judgment ruled against Evanston's attempt to restrict veteran housing for Black residents. In January 1958, Martin Luther King Jr. visited Beth Emet the Free Synagogue in Evanston to speak on integration.

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  • Code of Ethics (Ch. 12A)

    Dallas, TX
    Other
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  • Advisory Opinion-21-004-Appearance of Conflict of Interest Signed

    Scranton, PA
    Other

    The Scranton Ethics Board issued Advisory Opinion 21-004 on June 3, 2021, addressing whether City Solicitor Joseph A. O'Brien may review and approve invoices submitted by Oliver, Price & Rhodes (OPR) for payment when O'Brien is a partner in that firm. O'Brien, appointed City Solicitor in October 2020, requested the opinion regarding his role in approving outside counsel invoices, which involves verifying engagement, hourly rates, service performance, and billing hours reasonability. The Board determined the advisory opinion request fell within its authority under Section 8 of the City of Scranton Code of Ethics to consider conflicts of interest and ethical conduct. O'Brien stated he has no material interest in OPR and receives no portion of its fees, though the document excerpt does not provide the Board's final determination on the conflict question.

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  • Campaign Contribution Limitations

    Scranton, PA
    Other

    This memorandum from City Business Administrator Eileen Cipriani notifies municipal officials of adjusted campaign contribution limits required under the City's Code of Ethics, effective January 1, 2024. The Code mandates that maximum contribution amounts in §6-23.3 be adjusted every four years, with calculations completed by December 15 of the preceding year. The adjustments increase the maximum contribution limit under Section 6-23.3(A)(1)(a) from $2,700 to $3,400; Section 6-23.3(A)(1)(b) from $5,000 to $6,300; and Section 6-23.3(A)(1)(c) from $5,000 to $6,300, all taking effect January 1, 2024.

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  • Jacksonville.gov - Boards And Commissions

    Jacksonville, FL
    Other

    This document catalogs Jacksonville's boards and commissions organized by function. The city maintains 24 advisory boards including the Better Jacksonville Plan Project Administration Committee, Homelessness Initiatives Commission, and Mayor's LGBTQ+ Advisory Board, which provide advice and resident perspectives to the mayor and City Council. Eleven oversight bodies including the Art in Public Places Committee and Board of Library Trustees perform advisory functions and may allocate city funding within certain programs. Ten regulatory boards and commissions including the Jacksonville Ethics Commission, Planning Commission, and Jacksonville Historic Preservation Commission exercise regulatory authority to make rulings and impose penalties under the Ordinance Code. Board members are required to complete ethics training materials provided by the city.

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    boards and commissionsadvisory bodiesregulatory bodiesgovernment administration
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  • Scranton Ethics Board Complaint Form June 2020

    Scranton, PA
    Other

    The City of Scranton Board of Ethics Complaint Form from June 2020 provides the standardized instrument for filing ethics violations allegations against city officials or employees. Complaints must identify the respondent by name and position, provide detailed allegations citing specific sections of the City of Scranton Code of Ethics (Article VII of the Administrative Code), and include supporting documents or evidence; incomplete forms will not be processed. The form requires notarization and sworn affidavit language affirming facts under penalty of perjury. The Ethics Law provides protection against retaliation for good-faith complainants under Section 9, maintains confidentiality of board proceedings and investigative records under Section 10 until final determination, and the final order becomes public record once appeal rights are exhausted.

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  • Code of Ethics

    Scranton, PA
    Other
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  • Financial Disclosure and Affiliation Statement Documents

    Evanston, IL
    Other
    financial disclosureethicscode of ethicsconflict of interestpublic trust
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  • Advisory Opinion-21-001-Outside Employment Signed

    Scranton, PA
    Other

    The Scranton Ethics Board issued Advisory Opinion 21-001 on February 16, 2021, in response to a February 9, 2021 request from Paul Kelly, Esquire, solicitor for the Scranton Municipal Recreation Authority and Redevelopment Authority, asking whether he could serve as campaign chairman for a candidate running for City office in the May 2021 primary election. The Board determined that the request fell within its authority under Section 8 of the City of Scranton Code of Ethics to render advisory opinions on conflicts of interest and ethical conduct. The opinion cited Section 6-20(A)(1) of the Ethics Code, which prohibits employees from accepting employment that might reasonably require disclosure of confidential information acquired through their official position, and referenced Section 6-15(B) requiring officials and employees to guard against conflicts of interest. The document appears incomplete, as the final advisory conclusion is cut off mid-page.

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  • Ethics Board Review of 2019 Statements of Financial Interest

    Scranton, PA
    Other

    The Scranton Board of Ethics conducted its annual review of 2019 Statements of Financial Interest filed by city officials, as required by the City Code. Due to pandemic-related considerations, the board limited its 2019 review scope to the offices of Mayor, City Council, and Controller. Governor Wolf extended the filing deadline from May 1, 2020, to July 15, 2020. Board Member Carol Migliorino reviewed the statements on July 17, 2020, and confirmed that Mayor Paige Gebhardt Cognetti, former mayors Wayne Evans and William Courtright, Council President William Gaughan, Council Members Kyle Donahue, and Controller John Murray all filed by the deadline, along with former council members Mary Dempsey and Patrick Rogan. Former Council Member Tim Perry did not submit a completed form by the deadline.

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  • Welcome to Public Service - Town of West Hartford

    Hartford, CT
    Other

    This is a welcome guide prepared by the Town of West Hartford Office of Corporation Counsel (revised January 2025) for appointed members of town boards and commissions. The document, introduced by Town Clerk Leon S. Davidoff, outlines expectations for volunteer service, emphasizing regular meeting attendance and active participation as requirements for membership in "good standing." The guide covers key topics including the Freedom of Information Act, public meetings and records, Robert's Rules of Order, ethics codes, and legal questions, with appendices providing sample agendas, minutes, and procedural reference materials.

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