Whose Ethics?
Reformers say the Ethics Commission needs to alter its focus and honor the city's important grassroots political culture

Part two in a Guardian series

The read part one, click here.

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The San Francisco Ethics Commission is at an important crossroads, facing decisions that could have a profound impact on the city's political culture: should every violation be treated equally or should this agency focus on the most flagrant efforts to corrupt the political system?

The traditionally anemic agency that regulates campaign spending is just now starting to get the staff and resources it needs to fulfill its mandate. But its aggressive investigation of grassroots treasurer Carolyn Knee (see "The Ethics of Ethics," 7/4/07) — which concluded July 9 with her being fined just $267 — is raising questions about its focus and mission.

"For the first time in our history, we're having growing pains," Ethics Commission executive director John St. Croix told the Guardian, noting that the agency's 16 staffers (slated to increase to 19 next year) are double what he started with three years ago.

A D V E R T I S E M E N T


Reformers like Joe Lynn — a former Ethics staffer and later a commissioner — say the commission should do more to help small, all-volunteer campaigns negotiate the Byzantine campaign finance rules, be more forgiving when such campaigns make mistakes, and focus on more significant violations by campaigns that seek to deceive voters and swing elections.

"The traditional thinking is there's no exception to the law, and that's been my traditional thinking too," Lynn said. "But it doesn't cut the mustard when you see a Carolyn Knee say, 'I'm not going to do that again.'<\!s>"

At Knee's June 11 hearing, Doug Comstock — who often does political consulting for small organizations — urged commissioners to reevaluate their mission. "Why are you here?" he asked them. "You're not here to pick on the little guys."

Yet St. Croix told us, "That's not really the way the law is written. Everybody is supposed to be treated the same.... The notion that the Ethics Commission was only created to nail the big guns is not correct."

That said, St. Croix agrees that regulators should be tougher on willful violators and those who have lots of experience and familiarity with the rules they're breaking. And he said they do that. But it's the grassroots campaigns that tend to have the most violations.

"It's frustrating because the people who make the most mistakes are the ones with the least experience," St. Croix said, noting that the commission can't simply ignore violations.

A MATTER OF PRIORITIES

But critics of the commission say the problem is one of priorities. Even if there were problems with Knee's campaign, there was no reason the commission should have launched such an in-depth and expensive investigation four years after the fact. That decision was recently criticized in a resolution approved by the San Francisco Democratic County Central Committee, which argued that the approach discourages citizens from getting politically involved.

"[The] San Francisco Ethics Commission spends an inordinate amount of its meager resources in pursuing petty violations allegedly committed ...

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( 2 comments | Comment on this article )
Quo_Vadis on Tuesday, July 10, 2007 at 11:41 PM
St. Croix's statements are total bullshit - that Grassroot campaigns have to be equally penalized. In actuality, the Ethics Commission is hostile to grassroot campaigns because they dare to oppose and criticize the policies of the Newsom Adminstration.The Ethics Commission has become a political tool of the Newsom administration to punish campaigns that do not conform to his wishes and reward his friends and allies. Case in point, the Kamala Harris and Andrew Lee campaigns. The paid less than 1 cent to the $ of the original fines. The staff have no regard for the truth. They create violations where there are none. The Ethics Commission is hostile to the intent of the public who voted for it. The Ethics Commission should be disbanded.
Quo_Vadis on Wednesday, July 11, 2007 at 11:03 AM
The Ethics Commission picks on the little grassroots campaign because they are easy money -- the grassroots camaign cannot afford lawyers and CPA's to prepare their reports. Each report costs at least $1,000 to prepare. The fines to grassroot campaign is a money making machine for the Ethics Commission. The Ethics Commission is corrupt.

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