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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Lopez
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/1/08
HB
SHORT TITLE Ethical Conduct Of Political Subdivisions
SB 320
ANALYST Wilson
ESTIMATED ADDITIONAL OPERATING BUDGET IMPACT (dollars in thousands)
FY08
FY09
FY10 3 Year
Total Cost
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
Total
$0.1
$0.1
Recurring General
Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to other ethics bills
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC)
Attorney General’s Office (AGO)
Department of Finance & Administration (DFA)
Public Education Department (PED)
State Personnel Office (SPO)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 320 amends the Governmental Conduct Act to include public officers and employees
of all political subdivisions of the state. The bill broadens the definition of “public officer or
employee" to include “any elected or appointed official or employee of a state agency or local
government agency" and adds a definition for “local government agency," which includes “any
branch, agency, instrumentality, institution or other entity of any political subdivision of the
state." The bill will make the current prohibitions now applicable to those individuals added by
these changes to the definitions.
The bill also adds language duplicating existing provisions regarding contracts with state
agencies but substituting “local government agency" where the original provisions say “state
agency," thus making it explicit that these prohibitions apply with equal force to local
government agencies.
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Senate Bill 320 – Page
2
The bill adds language specifying that the Attorney General, as well as the Secretary of State,
shall be responsible for advising and educating persons covered by the Act.
Finally, the bill adds a new section providing that nothing in the Act shall be construed to
preclude a local government agency from adopting laws, ordinances, rules or standards that are
more stringent than those required by the Act.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
DFA states the fiscal impact of this legislation is minimal. There may be some small fiscal
impact to the Secretary of State and the Attorney General, which are charged with education
and referrals for enforcement.
There will be a minimal administrative cost for statewide update, distribution and documentation
of statutory changes. Any additional fiscal impact on the judiciary will be proportional to the
enforcement of this law and commenced prosecutions and civil actions. New laws, amendments
to existing laws and new hearings have the potential to increase caseloads in the courts, thus
requiring additional resources to handle the increase.
SPO notes there will be an added burden on all local agencies in order to comply with the
provisions of this bill, but they should be able to handle the requirements with existing resources.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
DFA provided the following:
This bill will impose several new ethics requirements on local governments, which have not
previously been covered by the Governmental Conduct Act. First, it will prohibit local
government officers and employees from coercing other officers or employees to perform
political activities, contribute to political parties, or vote a certain way. While also protected by
the U.S. Constitution, this statute amendment will help protect local government employees
from intimidation in the workplace.
Second, the bill will require all local government officers and employees to disclose all outside
employment to their supervisor or, if there is no supervisor, to the Secretary of State. This was
a new statutory requirement for state officers and employees in 2007, and may prevent conflicts
of interest between officers'/employees' public and private duties. As it requires disclosure of
all outside employment, including that which is not in conflict with stated job duties, there may
be some invasion of privacy.
Third, the bill prevents local government agencies from entering into contracts with officers or
employees of that local government, their family members, or with a business in which an
officer, employee, or family member has a substantial ownership interest, unless the contract is
awarded under a bid or request for proposal process pursuant to the Procurement Code; the
potential contractor is not eligible under a sole source or small purchase contract. This is likely
to prevent any unfair contract awards and ensure a fair process for all local government
contracts.
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Senate Bill 320 – Page
3
Fourth, the bill limits business involvement by local government officers and employees after
their departure from the local government post. It prohibits local governments from entering
into contracts with a person or business represented by a former officer or employee within one
year if the contract is a result of an action by the officer or employee and has a value of more
than $1,000, and it prohibits local governments from entering into such contracts at all if the
contract is a direct result of the former officer's or employee's action while employed. It also
prohibits the former officer or employee from pursuing such action. This will prevent conflicts
of interest and unethical behavior by officers/employees with an eye toward business dealings
after their government service. Similarly, it prevents sales by officers, employees, their
families, and their businesses to the local government agency employer, to any employees
under their supervision, and to any person under their regulatory authority. Some local
governments, particularly very small communities, may find it difficult to avoid such conflicts,
however, there are exceptions for sales to the agency or employees if the sale is in good faith
and the officer/employee is unaware of the conflict.
The AGO provided the following:
This bill erases the patchwork of ethics laws that currently apply to government, and in
its place, the bill creates a uniform body of ethics laws that apply systematically to all
public bodies, officials, and employees.
Currently, the Governmental Conduct Act places ethics requirements only on state
government, with one exception: Section 10-16-13 prohibits local governments from
awarding bids to an employee who prepared the bid.
The Governmental Conduct Act prohibits state officers and employees from taking
official acts for the primary purpose of directly enhancing their financial interest. There
is no rationale for placing this ethical standard only on state government, and this bill will
correct this. Similarly, the Governmental Conduct Act prohibits state officers and
employees from using confidential information for anyone’s personal gain. Again, there
is no rationale for placing this ethical standard only on state government, and this bill will
correct this.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
The bill imposes a duty on the Secretary of State and Attorney General to advise those persons
required to perform duties under the Governmental Conduct Act of those duties at least
annually. With the inclusion in the act of local government agencies, there may also be
additional enforcement duties imposed on the Secretary of State, Attorney General, and local
District Attorneys.
RELATIONSHIP
SB 320 relates to:
HB 160, Amend Gift Act Allowable Amounts
HB 309, State Ethics Commission Act
HB 344, State Ethics Commission Act
HJM 24, Study Bipartisan State Elections Commission
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Senate Bill 320 – Page
4
SB 132, Whistleblower Protection Act
SB 376, State Ethics Commission Act
SB 437, State Ethics Commission Act
SJR 6, Create State Ethics Commission, CA
DW/bb