San Francisco Ethics Commission

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The San Francisco Ethics Commission is a public agency tasked with maintaining city bylaws [clarification needed, there is no "city" bylaws, each Board or Commission or policy body has its own bylaws] in San Francisco, California.[1] The commission specifically files and audits campaign finance disclosure statements, handles campaign consultant registration and regulation.[2] They also handle lobbyist registration and regulation along with the filing of officer for statements of economic interest and the administration of the Whistleblower program.[2] Lastly, they mitigate[clarification needed] investigations of ethics complaints, enforce education and training and provide advice and statistical reporting.[2]

The San Francisco Ethics Commission oversees multiple good governance policies for the City & County of San Francisco. Issues covered include oversight and public reporting of campaign finance; the registration of campaign consultants, lobbyists, and permit expeditors; and conflicts of interest reporting. [3]

It also enforces these issues, including by issuing fines. The Commission can also issue policy recommendations and directly place relevant measures on the ballot. The Commission appoints an Executive Director who, in turn, hires staff to carry out the agency’s day-to-day work. [4]

Establishment[edit]

The Ethics Commission was placed on the ballot by seven members of the Board of Supervisors. Supervisors Angela Alioto, Sue Bierman, Terrance Hallinan, Kaufman, Susan Leal, Carol Migden, and Kevin Shelly supported it. Supervisors Conroy, Hsieh, Willie B. Kennedy, and Bill Maher opposed it.

The measure was placed on the November 1993 ballot, known as Proposition K.

The measure was supported by the county Democratic Party, the Chamber of Commerce, the Labor Council, Common Cause, and many other political leaders.

It was opposed by a committee named Citizens Against Putting the Foxes in Charge of the Hen Coop and the San Francisco Taxpayers Association. The latter included future Ethics Commissioner Quentin Kopp, then a State Senator, who authored the ballot handbook’s paid argument against Proposition K. Regardless, the measure passed.[5]

Notable Rulings[edit]

San Francisco District Attorney Kamala Harris[edit]

Kamala Harris faced a campaign finance ethics violation in 2003 when she broke a voluntary $211,000 spending cap for the San Francisco district attorney's race. The Ethics Commission found that the violations appeared to be unintentional and levied a penalty of $34,000, reduced from the potential maximum penalty of $65,000.[6][7]

Supervisor Mark Farrell[edit]

In 2014, then-Supervisor (and future Interim Mayor) Mark Farrell was fined $190,903.04 for illegal coordination between his campaign committee and another third party.[8]

Supervisor Eric Mar[edit]

Former Supervisor Eric Mar was fined for accepting tickets to events in public lands in his District. [9] He later admitted to not understanding the rules. [10]

Mayor London Breed[edit]

Mayor London Breed was fined $22,792 for a series of ethics violations, including misusing her title as mayor for personal gain and violating laws on accepting gifts and campaign contributions.[11] Breed agreed to pay fines for these violations, acknowledging responsibility for her actions.[12] This case marked the first time a sitting mayor in San Francisco settled such a matter, highlighting the significance of the penalties imposed by the Ethics Commission.

The specific ethics violations that led to Breed's fine included three incidents:[13][14]

  1. In 2018, Breed asked then-Governor Jerry Brown to commute the prison sentence of her brother, Napoleon Brown, in a letter that was deemed a misuse of her city title. She was fined $2,500 for this violation.
  2. Breed accepted a gift of about $5,600 in car repairs from Mohammed Nuru, the disgraced former head of the public works department, whom she acknowledged dating briefly two decades ago. The Ethics Commission found that she violated laws by accepting this gift and fined her $8,292.
  3. In 2015, while a member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, Breed solicited two restaurateurs to each pay $1,250 directly to a Pride parade float without properly recording these contributions in campaign finance disclosures. These donations exceeded the $500 limit per person set for campaign contributions. Breed was fined a total of $12,000 for these two violations.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Pang denied public funds after investigation. Wyatt Buchanan. San Francisco Chronicle. 10-03-2008. Retrieved 08-06-2011.
  2. ^ a b c Ethics Commission Mission, Code and Information
  3. ^ https://sfethics.org/
  4. ^ "Ethics Commission By-Laws". 9 March 2016.
  5. ^ https://webbie1.sfpl.org/multimedia/pdf/elections/November2_1993short.pdf
  6. ^ "Harris Stipulation, Decision and Order" (PDF). San Francisco Ethics Commission. Retrieved 2024-03-07.
  7. ^ Gordon, Rachel (2003-10-07). "Harris violated S.F. campaign finance law / D.A. candidate to pay up to $34,000 for 'unintentional' mistake". SFGATE. Retrieved 2024-03-07.
  8. ^ https://sfethics.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/ed.letter.farrell.pdf
  9. ^ https://sfethicsstorage.blob.core.usgovcloudapi.net/case-resolutions/Eric-Mar_152201_Fully_Executed_Stip_Redacted.pdf
  10. ^ "Former SF Supervisor Mar fined for accepting tickets to Outside Lands". 8 November 2017.
  11. ^ "Ethics Commission Fines Mayor London Breed $22,792 for Violating Campaign Finance, Ethics, and Gift Laws". San Francisco Ethics Commission. 2021-08-14. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
  12. ^ Eskenazi, Joe (2021-08-13). "Mayor London Breed's $23K ethics fine is ratified". Mission Local. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
  13. ^ Ray, Justin (2021-08-04). "San Francisco Mayor Breed fined: Her three ethics violations, explained". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
  14. ^ "San Francisco mayor London Breed fined for 'significant' ethics breaches". The Guardian. 2021-08-04. Retrieved 2024-03-06.

External links[edit]