Thursday, February 10, 2011

Mayor Zimmer Announces Ethics and Campaign Finance Reform Package

From the Hoboken Mayor's Office, sweeping ethics reform in City Hall....

MAYOR ZIMMER ANNOUNCES ETHICS AND CAMPAIGN FINANCE REFORM PACKAGE

Calls on Council to vote on anti-wheeling and pay-to-play reforms

Hoboken Mayor Dawn Zimmer announced a series of ethics and campaign finance reform measures and called on the City Council to pass critical campaign finance reform legislation.


“Hoboken is a great, vibrant city with a rich history and so much to be proud of, but we also bear a legacy that we are not so proud of,” said Mayor Dawn Zimmer. “We must take a proactive approach to address corruption. These common sense reforms hold our government to a higher standard and are necessary to continue to restore the public’s trust in government.”

Mayor Zimmer called on the City Council to vote on anti-wheeling and pay-to-play legislation to close loopholes in campaign finance laws and strengthening existing pay-to-play laws.

“We recently learned only as a result of former Mayor Cammarano’s plea agreement that in just last 11 days of his campaign, he raised $292,000 – more than $100,000 of it from outside money that flowed into our City through political committees,” added Mayor Zimmer. “And during the last election, a political committee was used to skirt individual campaign finance limits. I call on the Council to vote on this important anti-wheeling and pay-to-play legislation, which is modeled on laws in other New Jersey jurisdictions, to close these loopholes and ensure that we have fair and transparent elections.

Mayor Zimmer also signed a series of executive orders today enacting ethics and campaign finance reforms in Hoboken and urged the City Council to pass legislation codifying the reforms.

The executive orders:

  • Mandate ethics and anti-sexual harassment training for all public employees
  • Ban workplace violence, harassment, and incivility
  • Mandate the forfeiture of city health benefits for dishonorable service
  • Ban nepotism in City government
  • Ban political fundraising on public property
  • Mandate an honor code for accepting recreation fees
  • Mandate a code of conduct for the recreation Department and all City recreation activities
The executive orders take effect immediately, but future mayors could choose not to honor them. An ordinance mirroring these reforms will be introduced before the City Council.

“I call on the Council to make these reforms permanent by codifying them through the accompanying ordinance,” said Mayor Zimmer. “These reforms are important for building a positive and safe work environment, restoring trust in government, and protecting the City financially.”

Link: http://www.hobokennj.org/news/mayor-zimmer-announces-ethics-and-campaign-finance-reform-package/

Links to documents:

Ethics:
http://hobokennj.org/docs/mayor/Exec-Order-Ethics-Training.pdf
Anti Sexual Harrassment Training:
http://hobokennj.org/docs/mayor/Exec-Order-Anti-Sexual-Harassment-Training.pdf
Ban workplace violence, harassment, and incivility:
http://hobokennj.org/docs/mayor/Exec-Order-Harassment-Incivility.pdf
Mandate the forfeiture of city health benefits for dishonorable service:
http://hobokennj.org/docs/mayor/Exec-Order-Health-Benefits.pdf
Ban nepotism in City government
http://hobokennj.org/docs/mayor/Exec-Order-Nepotism.pdf
Ban political fundraising on public property
http://hobokennj.org/docs/mayor/Exec-Order-Political-Fundraising.pdf
Mandate an honor code for accepting recreation fees
http://hobokennj.org/docs/mayor/Exec-Order-Honor-Code.pdf
Mandate a code of conduct for the recreation Department and all City recreation activities
http://hobokennj.org/docs/mayor/Exec-Order-Code-Of-Conduct.pdf
 

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Comments (6)

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Wondering if this can be done. We went through this when Camaranno resigned. At that time we were told that we had to have a mayor appointed ethics board or accept lax state rules. You can't make any rule up for this mayor (who I support). The rules must be for every other mayor to follow. That type of executive power made me and others very queasy.
This is a good start but where can I find a copy (draft) of the "important anti-wheeling and pay-to-play legislation?" Have any current members of council - or new candidates - actually proposed such legislation? And, if so, will it have teeth and will it pass constitutional muster? Will it include an outright ban on contributions from all PACs and non-profits (501c(4)) that play in the political arena or will it merely place a cap on the amount that can be contributed?
3 replies · active 735 weeks ago
See the docs from the last CC meeting. It was in those. Mason tried to bury it b/c it would prevent her from wheeling money to her allies so they can issue $40 checks to every Tom, Dick & Harriet willing to support her and her cronies for the price of a few 6 packs on election day.
Reformerus_Gianticus's avatar

Reformerus_Gianticus · 735 weeks ago

New Guy: Go to http://www.hobokennj.org/docs/council/respack11/r...

Start on Page 61 and you will see a draft version presented to City Council on 2/2/2011. The Council President Beth Mason tabled this ordinance. We will see when or if it comes back on the agenda.
It won't. it'll be lost in the pit called "subcommittee".
Reformerus_Gianticus's avatar

Reformerus_Gianticus · 735 weeks ago

Specifically start at page 76-
POLITICAL CONTRIBUTION LIMITS
§ 20B-5 Short Title
Election Contribution Restrictions
§ 20B-6 Purpose
The City of Hoboken seeks to compliment the goals of the New Jersey Campaign Contributions
and Expenditures Reporting Act, P.L. 1973, c. 83, as amended, N.J.S.A. 19:44A-1 et seq. through
local legislation to control the use of wheeling to usurp the goals of the New Jersey Campaign
Contribution and Expenditures Reporting Act for elected officials of the City of Hoboken.
As a result, the City hereby enacts this legislation to enforce contribution limits on a local level in
an attempt to stifle wheeling which can occur during the City’s local municipal elections.

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