A key agency tasked with keeping an eye on our elected city officials and department staff could enjoy greater autonomy over its budget, should voters this fall grant them that ability.
Voters are also being asked whether that agency 鈥 the Honolulu Ethics Commission 鈥 should also be granted more flexibility to hire and retain staff.
The two charter questions are among four questions total this year pertaining to the way the City and County of Honolulu governs. The other two ballot questions ask whether the city prosecutor should be limited to just two four-year terms of office (the position currently has no term limits), and whether Honolulu should establish a Youth Commission.
Separately, Maui, Kauai and Hawaii counties have their own charter questions. You can read all of them here.
The two amendments about the Honolulu Ethics Commission were proposed by the City Council and approved unanimously this summer, placing them on the fall ballot.
Charter Question No. 3, introduced in December by Councilman Tommy Waters, states, 鈥淪hall the Revised City Charter be amended to allow the Honolulu Ethics Commission to control its own budget after it has been enacted?鈥
Charter Question No. 4, introduced by Councilman Ron Menor in April, states, 鈥淪hall the Revised Charter be amended to require ethics commission staff to be appointed based on merit principles, but exempt them from the civil service position classification plan, and to have the salaries of all ethics commission staff set by the ethics commission, subject to specified limitations?鈥
Both questions received little testimony in opposition and have the backing of Jan Yamane, the commission鈥檚 executive director and legal counsel, and Victoria Marks, the commission chair.
In her May 8 on the budget control proposal 鈥 鈥 Marks said that the amendments would provide the commission 鈥渨ith budget flexibility and greater autonomy鈥 from the city administration. She said the changes would give the commission budget control similar to the Department of the Prosecuting Attorney.
Natalie Iwasa, a longtime observer of Honolulu Hale, said in in May that the need for budgetary control arose out of controversy over a commission spending item.
鈥淵ou may recall several years ago when the executive director of the Honolulu Ethics Commission wanted to purchase a $600 GPS tracking device to be used in an investigation about overtime abuse. City Corporation Counsel at the time disallowed the expenditure, and the (commission) was unable to move forward with their investigation,鈥 Iwasa wrote. 鈥淭he executive branch should not be able to stymie investigations. One way to stop that from happening is to give control of the budget to the (commission).鈥
Iwasa added that the City Council would still have to approve the commission鈥檚 budget, 鈥渟o that control would remain in place.鈥
Reporting on the GPS purchase in 2014, Civil Beat said that the commission wanted to use the tracking device to 鈥渋nvestigate city employees suspected of getting paid for work that they didn鈥檛 do. The alleged scheme is believed to be costing the city a quarter of a million dollars a year, according to a draft of a letter the Ethics Commission intends to send to Mayor Kirk Caldwell.鈥
Donna Leong, then the city鈥檚 corporation counsel, took five weeks to approve the request, 鈥渂y which time the investigative window on the case had closed.鈥
The GPS matter is not mentioned in Resolution 19-331. But it notes that the seven members of the commission are appointed by the mayor and confirmed by the council. It is also attached to the Department of Corporation Counsel 鈥 the city鈥檚 legal team 鈥 for administrative purposes only.
It also points to Honolulu voters approving an amendment to the charter commission in 2016 prohibiting the city administration from withholding funding to the Department of Prosecuting Attorney approved by the council.
鈥淭he Council believes that similarly prohibiting the City Administration from withholding funding that has been approved by the Council for the Commission would allow the Commission greater autonomy from the City Administration and further the Commission鈥檚 ability to carry out the Commission鈥檚 Charter-prescribed duties efficiently and effectively,鈥 the resolution explains.
As Civil Beat has reported, the commission clashed repeatedly with the Caldwell administration in recent years. Yamane replaced longtime director Chuck Totto, who resigned in 2016.
‘Highest Ethical Standards’
The Ethics Commission has also struggled with staffing.
In on charter amendment No. 4, Marks said its passage would give the commission greater flexibility to describe positions, hire and retain the specialized staff Marks said it needs 鈥渢o grow and strengthen the city鈥檚 ethics and lobbyist programs.”
She said it has 鈥渓ong been a commission vision鈥 to exempt its staff from restrictive classification requirements and to set pay levels. Marks said that the commission feels it is important that the commission 鈥渋s adequately staffed鈥 and that staff members are 鈥渇airly compensated.鈥
Commission staff are not currently civil service employees, and the city clerk鈥檚 office says that question No. 4 won鈥檛 change that status. Rather, , staff are exempt employees, meaning that the commission 鈥渕ay hire and terminate staff at any time without cause.鈥
Lynne Matusow, who also follows city government closely, to .
鈥淚t appears there is a hidden agenda as we do not know who is really behind it,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t was introduced 鈥榖y request.鈥 What is the name of the requester? This appears to be patronage, pure and simple and neither the Council nor the voters should be fooled by it.鈥
Marks said the resolution was introduced by Menor at the commission鈥檚 request.
If approved by voters by a simple majority, charter amendments No. 3 and 4 would go into effect July 1 and Jan. 1, respectively.
The Honolulu Ethics Commission, , 鈥渆nsures that all of Honolulu鈥檚 approximately 10,000 elected leaders, appointed officials, and employees understand and follow the highest ethical standards of conduct governing their work for the public.鈥 It educates, advises, and enforces city ethics laws and lobbyist regulations.
It is separate from the Hawaii State Ethics Commission, which is the state鈥檚 ethics watchdog agency for state officers and employees.
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About the Author
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Chad Blair is the politics editor for Civil Beat. You can reach him by email at cblair@civilbeat.org or follow him on Twitter at .