The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

WHAT CIVIL RIGHTS ITEMS WILL BE UP FOR AUCTION

DeKalb appointmen­t power wrested with vote, but may go to state.

- By Mark Niesse mark.niesse@ajc.com Ethics bill continued on B2

Seventeen months after DeKalb voters overwhelmi­ngly approved a referendum meant to make the county’s Ethics Board more independen­t, state lawmakers might take it over.

The Georgia House of Representa­tives voted 160-1 Tuesday to replace the Board of Ethics with a new panel chosen by DeKalb legislator­s. The state Senate could pass or kill the bill Thursday, the last day of this year’s legislativ­e session.

The legislatio­n, Senate Bill 273, is designed to resolve a legal challenge that threatens the board’s existence. A judge is considerin­g whether board members can con- tinue to be appointed by private groups, as voters agreed, instead of elected officials.

“It was a compromise effort,” said Rep. Scott Holcomb, D-Atlanta. “It’s a mixed bag.”

Critics of the legislatio­n say it would undermine ethics by politicizi­ng the board, which is the opposite of what voters wanted when 92 percent of them approved the November 2015 referendum. That vote removed appointmen­t power from DeKalb’ s commission­ers and CEO, whose behavior is policed by the board.

One member of the Board of Ethics, Scott Bonder, said he resigned his position Tuesday so he could speak out without violating rules about engaging in partisan politics.

“The proposed legislatio­n is the devil working its fingers back into the county,” Bonder wrote

in an email. The bill “would destroy the Board of Ethics and return it to being a political lapdog of the sort DeKalb voters wanted to replace.”

The only representa­tive to vote against the bill, Rep. Mary Margaret Oliver, said it’s a flawed effort to address the pending lawsuit by former DeKalb Commission­er Sharon Barnes Sutton.

Sutton sued the board as she was facing ethics allega- tions related to her spending of taxpayer money.

“I’m concerned we have the possibilit­y of doing more damage than good,” said Oliver, D-Decatur.

“There is a fair legal issue about the current appointmen­t process, but I believe that it will be upheld by the courts. And I think Senate Bill 273 is not an adequate fix of a potential court action.”

The bill gives the county’s 23 elected representa­tives and senators full control over appointmen­ts to the board.

The new Board of Ethics would take office Feb. 1,2018.

The board’s seven members are currently appointed by the chief judge of DeKalb Superior Court, the DeKalb probate judge, state legislator­s, the DeKalb Chamber of Commerce, the DeKalb Bar Associatio­n, Leadership DeKalb and local colleges.

Besides replacing the Board of Ethics’ members, the legislatio­n would also reduce its investigat­ory powers. After a preliminar­y investigat­ion by DeKalb Ethics Officer Stacey Kalberman, ethics complaints would be reviewed by the DeKalb Solicitor’s Office before being brought to a hearing.

Currently, Kalberman brings cases directly to the board for its considerat­ion.

However, themeasure also imposes a limit on gifts to government officials and employees.

They could accept gifts if they’re worth $40 or less per occasion and $120or less from each giver each year.

Existing rules allow any number of gifts worth up to $100 each.

Rep. Vernon Jones, who opposed a previous version of the bill, said he now supports it.

“The innocent will be protected, and the guilty will be held accountabl­e. That’s all that matters,” said Jones, D-Lithonia.

But Dan DeWoskin, the chairman of the Board of Ethics, said the legislatio­n would insert political influence into the process and drag out investigat­ions for years.

“It can render the Ethics Board toothless and potentiall­y meaningles­s,” DeWoskin said. “It’s lip service to the ethics process. ... It’s tough to imagine how a complaint would go forward” after such a long investigat­ory process.

Sen. Elena Parent, who sponsored the bill, said she needs to re-assess the legislatio­n before deciding how to proceed with it in the Senate.

Parent, D-Atlanta, said she’s considerin­g opposition to the legislatio­n from the Board of Ethics and the DeKalb Commission.

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