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Panel Uncovers New Loophole in Ethics Code

June 28, 1991|RICH CONNELL and LOUIS SAHAGUN, TIMES STAFF WRITERS

Los Angeles' Ethics Commission has found another kink in the conflict-of-interest ordinance, even as its grapples with the fresh discovery that most city employees cannot be penalized under the new ethics law.

Commission officials said it appears that Mayor Tom Bradley's appointed commissioners are free to work as City Hall lobbyists while they serve in office--even though the law stipulates that they must halt such activities after they step down.


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"It appears there are more restrictions on former commissioners than current commissioners," said Ethics Commission Executive Director Ben Bycel, whose staff is analyzing newfound loopholes in the year-old law this week.

Bycel said the commission "is only now turning over these rocks and looking under them . . . because it hasn't had the staff to turn over all the rocks on the ordinance landscape."

Indeed, the part-time commission has been struggling for months to establish and enforce the new City Hall code of conduct amid waves of complaints from city employees and officials that the new restrictions on gifts and disclosure of personal finances go too far. Officials say that the ethics unit is understaffed and overworked.

"The commission is doing the best it can under the circumstances," said Lisa Foster, executive director of California Common Cause. "The trouble they are having is a reflection of how the City Council is treating the commission--it is an unwelcome guest at City Hall."

City Councilman Michael Woo said: "The council has been one of the major stumbling blocks for the entire ethics reform effort. . . . It has treated the Ethics Commission as if it was a nest of vermin."

City Council President John Ferraro disagreed: "People voted for the ethics package by a big margin; why would we openly try to undercut it?"

Ferraro recently introduced a motion to have the entire ethics law re-evaluated "because of all the problems they are having."

The ethics law was handily approved by voters in June, 1990, in the wake of allegations of ethics violations in the mayor's office. The law included a raise for council members. Problems with enactment of the law were scheduled to be addressed today at an Ethics Commission meeting.

Bycel complained that the commission has been unable to gain permission from the city attorney's office to hire a full-time independent attorney to help interpret the arcane and confusing language of the ordinance.

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