The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Bill revising Ethics Board's makeup introduced in Senate

- By Tia Mitchell tia.mitchell@ajc.com

Senators whose districts include part of DeKalb County have taken the first step in reconstitu­ting its Ethics Board.

The board has been dormant ever since the Geor- gia Supreme Court decided in August to uphold a lower court ruling about its makeup. That ruling said the Ethics Board was operating unconstitu­tionally because a majority of members were appointed by private groups and not elected officials. The DeKalb County Senate dele- gation has now signed off on Senate Bill 7, which outlines new procedures for selecting who will serve on the sev- en-person board.

Under the proposal, the DeKalb House and Senate delegation­s will appoint two members each. One Eth- ics Board member will be selected by a majority vote of the county commission. The county’s probate court judge and chief superior court judge will continue to appoint one member each.

DeKalb voters would decide whether to approve these changes in a referen- dum on the ballot in November. If the measure passes, a new Ethics Board would be selected by Dec. 31.

Sen. Emanuel Jones, chair- man of the county’s Senate delegation, said he has already begun the process of getting the bill approved in that chamber as part of a slate of local bills.

He has also spoken with Rep. Karla Drenner, the new chairwoman of the county’s 16-member House del- egation. Jones, D-Decatur, is hoping that a majority of DeKalb House members sign off on the bill.

DeKalb voters in 2015 approved allowing outside groups like the DeKalb Bar Associatio­n and Leadership DeKalb to appoint a major- ity of Ethics Board members as part of an effort to make it more independen­t. Former Commission­er Sharon Barnes Sutton soon after filed a suit to challenge those changes.

While her legal challenges and later appeals were pending, the Ethics Board continued to operate as normal. But its activity ground to a halt once the Supreme Court made its final ruling in August.

In 2017, DeKalb lawmakers considered legislatio­n to allow elected officials to sign off on appointmen­ts to the Ethics Board in hopes of making Sutton’s lawsuit moot. That effort fell apart when a DeKalb House Delegation committee deadlocked on whether to approve the changes.

 ??  ?? Sen. Emanuel Jones chairs the county’s Senate delegation.
Sen. Emanuel Jones chairs the county’s Senate delegation.

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