Saturday, June 21, 2014

Gold Dome Ethics

The 2014 legislative session confirms the fact that bills submitted to protect Georgia residents from Federal government overreach are scuttled in committee or otherwise torpedoed to help give cover to legislators who don’t want their votes to go on record. I’m sure these moves are facilitated by the arcane rules maintained by the Georgia House and Senate committees.  The game appears to be to continue abusing and ignoring Georgia taxpayers.
The Gold Dome is full of Chamber of Commerce “conservatives” who do a great job for special interests and Georgia cities and counties, but failed to pass Obamacare and Common Core nullification laws.  They continue to avoid repealing Regionalism and UN Agenda 21 implementation. The “over the top” Pro-Gun Bill was a headline getter and a pro-hunter move, but it was low priority compared to nullifying Obamacare and Common Core.  It is clear that Georgia politicians want to get all the printed federal grant money it can get, that’s $26 billion this year.  Their Chamber of Commerce friends are counting on federal dollars for their economic development boondoggles. This is governance by bribery.  Taxpayers will end up paying for all these $billions with inflation.  The tab is over 400%; that’s the Fed’s increase in the money supply.  We can pay for these boondoggles with inflation of 10% for the next 40 years.
We need strong bills to protect our electric rates from the EPA carbon scam. Erecting a solar farm to mollify the Obama administration is a sign of weakness.  Global Warming is a hoax.  By pretending it isn’t our politicians are admitting that they are either corrupt or stupid. Failing to pass legislation to end the charade is treason.
The following article will give you some reference to the Georgia #1 in Corruption story, but it shows that these studies don’t expose how ignored we taxpayers are when try to work with the state legislature.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
National study says Georgia is most corruption-prone state Posted: March 19, 2012 by Larry PetersonSIGN UP FOR SUBSCRIBER BENEFITS
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A new study ranks Georgia politics the country’s worst for accountability and openness — and the most at risk for corruption. Georgia is among seven states with grades of F following a yearlong-plus inquiry by three groups.
The Peach State flunked in nine of the 14 categories used by the Washington, D.C.-based Center for Public Integrity.
Examples: public access to information, legislative and congressional redistricting, legislative accountability, campaign finance and lobbying disclosure.
Working with two other organizations, Public Radio International and Global Integrity, the center gave Georgia D’s in two categories and a D- in another. The state’s best grades were a B in internal auditing and C- for judicial accountability.
The study cited what it called loophole-ridden laws, toothless enforcement, secret decision making, and weak rules for disclosing conflicts of interest.
Freebies galore
It said our political process is awash in special-interest cash and heavily influenced by lobbyists about whom the public has too little information. “Some 658 state workers,” said an accompanying report by investigative reporter and editor Jim Walls, “accepted sports tickets, speaking fees, fancy meals and other gratuities over a two-year span.” But the state hasn’t fined a vendor for failing to disclose such gifts since 1999, project manager Caitlin Ginley said.
Walls said committees set up by governors and legislative leaders exploited exceptions in the law that let them collect hundreds of thousands of dollars. “Collectively,” he wrote, “executives of insurance companies, public utilities and other regulated entities have become the largest single source of campaign money for regulators running for re-election. “Utility officials raise money and work to help re-elect incumbents; a lobbyist for the cable TV industry managed one incumbent’s campaign in 2008.”
Reaction varied
Reaction varied from praise to surprise, skepticism or silence. At one end is William Perry, executive director of Common Cause Georgia, a nonpartisan political watchdog group. “In some areas,” Perry said, “their assessments are a little on the generous side.”
At the other end is Rick Thompson, a former state ethics enforcement official who advises officials such as Gov. Nathan Deal on ethics law compliance. “I think they hired Walls to do a hit piece on Georgia politics,” Thompson said, questioning the center’s decision to “farm out” research to reporters. He noted that a report the center did with its own researchers said Georgia ranked sixth-best in the country in 2006 for public access to legislative financial disclosure. Thompson speculated that a fairer mark in some categories in which the new study flunked Georgia would be “a B or a high C.”
Kennesaw State University political science professor Kerwin Swint said the new report “looks pretty damning.” “I would have thought we’d be in the bottom half,” Swint said, “but I’m surprised that we’re dead last.” Others said practices the center seems to believe discourage corruption don’t always do so.
A few wondered out loud why New Jersey, marred by rampant corruption in recent years, drew the top overall rating and was one of five states that earned a B. None received an A. 
Study process defended
The center defended its methods. It said it hired a reporter in every state capitol. “Each dug in and answered 330 questions about how their state handles transparency and accountability,” a center statement said.
University of Georgia political scientist Charles Bullock said it wasn’t always obvious that the center interpreted responses correctly.
But the statement said “those answers were ... scrubbed by peer reviewers, fact checkers and editors.” Ginley conceded that New Jersey’s high marks sounds “more than a little counter intuitive.”
States with histories of corruption, she said, often crack down on such behavior. “That’s apparently the case in New Jersey, where a series of scandals helped bring about some of the strongest ethics laws in the country,” Ginley added.
A recent University of Illinois study sought to identify the most corrupt 10 states. Georgia didn’t make the list. But Ginley said the center’s rankings aren’t political scandal score sheets. Instead, she said, they test the strength of laws and practices that encourage openness and deter corruption.
Walls cited sleaze that he said was common during more than a century of Democratic dominance and has continued during more recent Republican ascendancy.
He noted that Republicans promised ethics reform if voters turned the state over to them, but said they have done little to deliver on that promise. 
Other current problems
Among Georgia’s current ethical woes, Walls and Ginley said, are:
• The legislature often shuts out the public. The Senate GOP caucus meets secretly to determine the fate of every major bill. House budget writers do likewise concerning key spending measures.
• After spending cuts, a state ethics panel nearly quit doing investigations and focused on archiving candidates’ and lobbyists’ disclosure. Its top two staffers were forced out last year as they sought subpoenas for records from newly elected Deal, whose office declined to comment on the report.
• The 60,000-plus reports the panel receives annually are seldom audited, so candidates, lobbyists and donors usually may submit wrong or sketchy data with impunity.
• Generally, only elected officials and state department heads must reveal financial interests. In 2011, members of most state panels were exempted. Instead, they merely must state yearly that their public actions don’t affect their private interests.
• Banking regulators operate in secret, even as Georgia leads the nation in bank failures.
• Statewide office-seekers, but not lawmakers — who are at least as likely to be lobbied — must report business they’ve done with lobbyists or their clients.
• Georgia’s Open Records Act leaves it largely to the legislature and judges to decide what records they’ll release. Erratic enforcement of the law sometimes keeps the public in the dark. 
Reform attempts
Even after ethics questions forced Glenn Richardson from the House speakership in 2009, the report noted, reform efforts largely stalled. One would have curtailed campaign contributions, lobbyists’ gifts to lawmakers and how much candidates may transfer to other campaigns or political groups.
Instead, current Speaker David Ralston backed a successful measure that — among other things — required more lobbyist disclosures and raised fines for some violations. Ralston, whose office didn’t respond to a request for comment, argued that insufficient disclosure was the main issue that needed to be addressed. Ralston has been criticized for accepting a $17,000 European trip paid for by lobbyists who support high-speed rail.
“The legislature,” Swint said, “has been largely impervious to ethics reform. It seems not to care. The speaker is right that transparency is important, but it shouldn’t be a crutch for avoiding true accountability.”
Common Cause’s Perry said he hopes the new report will spur the legislature to push harder for reforms. He wants more lobbyist disclosure, limits on lobbyist gifts, tougher enforcement and nonpartisan redistricting.
“We don’t have bad people in office who want to be corrupt,” he said. “But we have an environment that makes it easy to be corrupted. “We’ve seen some big reforms that have been driven by scandal. But why should we have to wait for one before we do something?”
http://savannahnow.com/news/2012-03-19/national-study-says-georgia-most-corruption-prone-state#.U6Wf7-kg8qc

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