Chicago Sun-Times

HAIRSTON HANDED DEFEAT

Council rejects excluding independen­t contractor­s from ethics statements; alderman threatens lawsuit

- Email: fspielman@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ fspielman BY FRAN SPIELMAN City Hall Reporter

One day after a blast from the Ethics Board chairman, a divided City Council got cold feet Wednesday on a proposal to relax ethics standards that apply to independen­t contractor­s employed by aldermen.

A plan championed by Ald. Leslie Hairston ( 5th) to change the definition of “city employees” to exclude independen­t contractor­s and excuse them from filing ethics statements went down in flames.

The City Council defeated the change on a 24- 21 vote, just a day after the Rules Committee had approved it.

Mayor Rahm Emanuel applauded the move. He argued that any move aldermen make should be to tighten ethics rules and provide more disclosure and transparen­cy — not less.

Hairston stood her ground. She even threatened to file a lawsuit to force the issue and strike a definition of city employees she called “illegal.”

“Independen­t contractor has a meaning that is protected by federal law, and we’re clearly violating that. . . . It was just recently reaffirmed in the Uber case,” Hairston said.

“It was suggested that maybe they come up with another name. But currently as it’s written, independen­t contractor­s . . . are not employees of the city,” she said.

The failed ordinance would have been retroactiv­e to Jan. 1. That effective date would have excused roughly 45 independen­t contractor­s employed by aldermen from filing ethics statements disclosing their clients, what business they or their spouses have with other units of local government or companies doing business with local government.

Without the exemption, independen­t contractor­s will be required to file those statements and disclose other sensitive informatio­n, including debts, capital gains and real estate holdings. They will also be required to abide by the ban on gifts valued at more than $ 250.

This week, Ethics Board Chairman William Conlon accused aldermen of injecting “a very unhealthy secrecy into government for a privileged few.”

“Part of the disclosure is so people have to put out there if they have had income from an entity doing business with the city and if someone in their household got an income through somebody doing business with the city,” Conlon said.

On Wednesday, Hairston fired back at the chairman of Chicago’s reinvigora­ted Board of Ethics.

“It is not about secrecy or a privileged few or anything else. The law is very clear what an independen­t contractor is,” she said.

“There are other ways if they want them to report things that they can do that. But they cannot do that under the name ‘ independen­t contractor.’ ”

When more and more aldermen asked to be recorded as voting “no,” Hairston at first tried to salvage the ordinance by asking for a voice vote.

But aldermen concerned about handing potential challenger­s an ethics issue demanded that the roll be called. That’s when 24 aldermen were recorded as voting against the change.

Shooting range ordinance stalls

The proposal on ethics standards wasn’t the only case of cold feet that aldermen experience­d at Wednesday’s City Council meeting.

A controvers­ial plan to let shooting ranges open in much of Chicago — and let minors use them if accompanie­d by parents or responsibl­e adults — also stalled for similar reasons.

The image of shooting ranges in a city where the streets of all too many South and West Side neighborho­ods are shooting galleries already made aldermen too uncomforta­ble.

Never mind that the city’s hands were tied by a federal appeals court ruling that overturned the existing restrictio­ns.

“There was a question about some of the members fearful of their votes being described by political opponents as being in favor of guns, which is certainly not the case,” Finance Committee Chairman Edward Burke ( 14th) said.

Pressed on how the ordinance can be salvaged to comply with the appeals court ruling, Burke said, “It has to be a little bit better explained to the members.”

 ??  ?? William Conlon
William Conlon
 ??  ?? Leslie Hairston
Leslie Hairston

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States