Government Ethics
November 24th, 2008
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports that Georgia's Attorney General's office has a backlog of 32 ethics complaints which have been lingering in the system for the last 5 years.
"Bill Bozarth, executive director of the ethics watchdog group Common Cause Georgia, said the system of sending cases to the attorney general’s office for hearings was meant to cut the Ethics Commission’s backlog. 'The administrative law judge was a touted productivity savings to get backlogged cases through, and if they are just going over there and dying, that’s not working,' he said."
Read the full AJC article here
October 27, 2008
Common Cause
In response to an article published by the Atlanta Journal and Constitution on October 26, Common Cause Georgia reviewed campaign disclosure reports filed by Georgians for Community Redevelopment (view contribution report here).
As a result on October 27, 2008, Common Cause Georgia filed a complaint with the State Ethics Commission alleging illegal contributions by several public agencies to Georgians for Community Redevelopment a campaign committee organized for the purpose of promoting passage of Constitutional Amendment #2, the so-called "TAD amendment."
Common Cause Georgia does not take a position for or against Amendment #2. Executive Director, Bill Bozarth explained the reason for filing the complaint. “Common Cause
The ethics complaint questions about $125,000 worth of contributions to Georgians for Community Redevelopment. The complaint against "GCR" and several contributors maintains that the law is clear that public agencies are prohibited by law from engaging financially in such activity.
To see the list of respondents in the complaint, click here.
To see the statement of facts and summary of charges, click here.
Press:
Group: Agencies’ donation broke law, By Heather Vogell, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Tuesday, October 28, 2008
