Compliance with taking a mandatory ethics course has increased significantly, but some organizations still lag.
Since a new law requiring state legislators and employees to complete live or online ethics training classes every four years went into effect Jan. 1, the number of people taking the course has increased signifcantly as compared to 2021.
That鈥檚 due in part because an online, self-directed version of the course was introduced in 2020, when the pandemic forced many people to work from home.
As of Oct. 4, the number of legislators and employees taking the course has totaled nearly 30,000, or half of the 60,000 state workers that the has under its jurisdiction.
But there are still hundreds of workers covered that have not taken the training, either online or live via webinar or in-person classes. Commission staff plans to step up its outreach and education process between now and the end of the year to get more employees to comply with the law.
Robert Harris, the commission鈥檚 executive director, said at a commission meeting earlier this month that the focus will be on the higher level employees such as the governor, the lieutenant governor, state legislators, executive department heads and deputies who are required to make their financial disclosures public. Many of them have already completed the training.
But there are some 300 of these employees statewide and they also include the University of Hawaii Board of Regents, the Land Use Commission, the Public Utilities Commission, the Board of Land and Natural Resources and the Hawaii Community Development Authority, the Board of Education and trustees of the Office of Hawaiian Affairs 鈥 17 boards and commissions in total.
Of those 300, about 60 people have not enrolled in the training. And all of these workers are required to take the in-person or webinar version of the training, which allows for active question and answers, but not the online version. Commission staff typically visit agencies to administer the training.
Ethics commissioners welcomed the data presentation on compliance with the new law but expressed concern that some employees had yet to sign up.
Chair Wesley Fong said the commission鈥檚 emphasis is to be proactive when it comes to training and enforcement.
鈥淓verybody should know the law in regards to ethics, because if you don鈥檛, then it鈥檚 their problem, not ours,鈥 he said. 鈥淢y concern is who is lagging.鈥
And a new ethics commissioner, former state legislator Cynthia Thielen, wants the commission to 鈥渮ero in鈥 on the agencies that data show have less than 25% compliance.
She pointed specifically to the Hawaii Tourism Authority 鈥 鈥渁n incredibly important board,鈥 Thielen said 鈥 where commission staff reported only one of the 12 board members had been trained on ethics.
After this article was published, a spokesperson for the HTA said that the number of board members who had completed the required training is now up to nine. The remaining three will complete the requirement by Dec. 31.
Harris and Bonita Chang, the compliance director for the commission, cautioned that it was difficult for the commission to pinpoint the identities of specific employees, as each organization has human resource data that the ethics commission is not privy to. The data can also be skewed when an employee takes the training more than once, which has happened.
There are also agencies that have high turnover such as the state departments of transportation and public safety, two of the six departments that have a compliance rate of under 50%.
Another of those agencies, the Department of Law Enforcement, is new. While initial numbers showed that the DLE had a training compliance rate of just 30%, Harris said Friday that the agency had 鈥渕isreported鈥 its training statistics. Updated information shows that all 16 of DLE鈥檚 employees have completed training, or 100%.
After the presentation, Thielen and Fong crafted language for a letter that commission staff will send to the 11 organizations that posted a compliance rate of less than 20%, including the HTA.
Thielen expected that the letters would have a mobilizing impact, explaining that when a state legislator received a letter from the ethics commission 鈥渋t shook not only that person but other legislators.鈥
Defining Gifts
The legislation that became Act 165 was proposed in the 2022 session by the ethics commission. Not long after lawmakers convened in January, a former Senate majority leader and a sitting House Finance Committee vice chair admitted that they took part in a bribery scheme to benefit a wastewater company.
The House subsequently formed the Commission to Improve Standards of Conduct. In its that March, the commission 鈥 which included Harris 鈥 backed the legislation that became Act 165.
The gifts and reporting, fair treatment, confidential information, conflicts of interest, state contracts and post-employment restrictions.
For example, the online training raises the issue of whether or not a state legislator or employee can accept as a gift a tray of sushi, a box of manapua, a basket of wine and chocolates, a round of golf or an airline ticket.
The answer is 鈥渘o鈥 if the gift is intended to influence the legislator or employee in the performance of their official duties, or is given as a reward for any official action their part.
Sushi and manapua probably won鈥檛 be seen by the ethics commission as a violation of . But it鈥檚 advised to report all gifts in financial disclosure statements.
Harris said that if a legislator or employee does not take the training, the commission retains the ability to reinforce the by leveling fines.
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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 X at .