HomeMy WebLinkAbout2012_1221_Agenda_MeetingPacket Kurt Akamine Members:
Chair Kathy Clark
Calvin Murashige
Mark Hubbard Brad Nagano
Vice-Chair Paul Weil
Warren Perry
Secretary
COUNTY OF KAUAI BOARD OF ETHICS
NOTICE OF MEETING AND AGENDA
Friday, December 21, 2012
1:30 pm or shortly thereafter
Mo'ikeha Building, Liquor Conference Room 3
4444 Rice Street, L-ihu'e, HI 96766
CALL TO ORDER
APPROVAL OF MINUTES
Regular Open Session Minutes of November 16, 2012
BUSINESS
BOE 2012-17 Adopting Robert's Rules of Order,Newly Revised for matters of procedure
governing the conduct of Board meetings not addressed by the Board's
Rules. (Approved 11/16/12 for Rule-making process)
a. Rule-making process for adding Rule 13 to the Board of Ethics' Rules
and Regulations, Part I, and Interpretive Rules, Part II, outlining the
Parliamentary Authority under which the Board of Ethics conducts a
meeting.
BOE 2012-18 Election of Chair, Vice Chair and Secretary for 2013
BOE 2012-19 Approval of 2013 Meeting Schedule
DISCLOSURE
a. Sally Motta(Finance Department)
EXECUTIVE SESSION
Pursuant to Hawaii Revised Statutes §§92-4 and 92-5 (a) (4), 92-9 (a)(1-4) (b), the purpose of
this executive session is to receive and approve Executive Session minutes and to consult with
the Commission's legal counsel on issues pertaining to the Commission's and the County's
powers, duties,privileges, immunities, and/or liabilities as they may relate to this item, deliberate
and take such action as appropriate.
ES-34: Regular Executive Session Minutes of November 16, 2012
An Equal Opportunity Employer
Pursuant to H.R.S. §92-4 and H.R.S. 92-5 (a) (2) and(4), the purpose of this executive session is
to consider the evaluation, dismissal or discipline of an employee or officer of the County in
which charges have been alleged against an employee or officer where consideration of matters
affecting privacy will be involved;provided that if the individual concerned requests an open
meeting, an open meeting shall be held; and to consult with the Board's legal counsel on issues
pertaining to the Board's and the County's powers, duties,privileges, immunities, and/or
liabilities as they may relate to this item, deliberate and take such action as appropriate.
ES-2: BOE 11-003 Letter dated 11/25/11 requesting the Board of Ethics to initiate an
investigation into an allegation that an employee or officer of the County
has improperly used County resources
a. Resolution 2011-1, adopted January 13, 2012, defining the scope for an
investigation into an allegation that an employee or officer of the County
has improperly used county resources (Ongoing)
ES-3: BOE 11-004 Complaint dated 11/28/11 alleging that an employee or officer of the
County has improperly disclosed information and used their position to
secure a benefit,privilege or exemption for themselves or others
a. Resolution 2011-2, adopted January 13, 2012, defining the scope for an
investigation into a complaint alleging that an employee or officer of the
County has improperly disclosed information and used their position to
secure a benefit,privilege or exemption for themselves or others
(Ongoing)
ES-7: BOE 12-001 Complaint dated 1/12/12 alleging that an employee or officer of the
County is operating a private business in conflict with their position with
the County of Kaua'i
a. Resolution 2012-3, adopted March 9, 2012, defining the scope for an
investigation into a complaint alleging that an employee or officer of the
County operating a private business in conflict with their position with the
County of Kaua'i (Ongoing)
b. Production of materials, documents,records and response to Subpoena
Duces Tecum and related information and materials.
ES-8: BOE 12-002 Letter dated 2/1/12 requesting the Board of Ethics to initiate an
investigation into an allegation that an employee or officer of the County
has improperly used County property for other than public activity or
purpose
a. Resolution 2012-1 amending Resolution 2011-1, adopted March 9,
2012, defining the scope for an investigation into an allegation that an
21
Board of Ethics—December 21, 2012
employee or officer of the County has improperly used county resources
and or County property for other than public activity or purpose(Ongoing)
ES-16: BOE 12-004 Complaint dated 5/10/12 alleging that an employee or officer of the
County is improperly using County property for other than public activity
or purpose(Ongoing)
a. Departmental policy and practice on usage of County property
ES-35: BOE 12-005 Receipt by the Board of supplemental information from a complainant
regarding their previous Complaint(dated 6/1/12) alleging that an
employee or officer of the County has used discriminative and or biased
decision making regarding benefits
RETURN TO OPEN SESSION
Ratify Board of Ethics actions taken in Executive Session for items:
ES-2, ES-3, ES-7, ES-8, ES-16, ES-34 and ES-35
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Next Meeting: Friday, January 18— 1:30 p.m., Mo'ikeha Building, Liquor Conference Room
ADJOURNMENT
NOTICE OF EXECUTIVE SESSION
Pursuant to Hawaii Revised Statutes §92-7 (a), the Commission may, when deemed necessary,
hold an executive session on any agenda item without written public notice if the executive
session was not anticipated in advance. Any such executive session shall be held pursuant to
HRS §92-4 and shall be limited to those items described in HRS §92-5(a).
c: Mona Clark, Deputy County Attorney
PUBLIC COMMENTS and TESTIMONY
Persons wishing to offer comments are encouraged to submit written testimony at least 24-hours
prior to the meeting indicating:
1. Your name and if applicable, your position/title and organization you are representing;
2. The agenda item that you are providing comments on; and
3. Whether you will be testifying in person or submitting written comments only.
4. If you are unable to submit your testimony at least 24 hours prior to the meeting,please
provide 10 copies of your written testimony at the meeting clearly indicating the name of
the testifier; and
3 �
Board of Ethics—December 21, 2012
While every effort will be made to copy, organize and collate all testimony received,materials
received on the day of the meeting or improperly identified may be distributed to the members
after the meeting is concluded.
The length of time allocated to persons wishing to present verbal testimony may be limited at the
discretion of the chairperson or presiding member.
Send written testimony to:
Board of Ethics
Attn: Barbara Davis
Office of Boards &Commissions
4444 Rice Street, Suite 150
Llhu`e, HI 96766
Email: bdavis@kauai.gov
Fax: 241-5127 Phone: 241-4919
SPECIAL ASSISTANCE
If you need an alternate format or an auxiliary aid to participate,please contact the Boards &
Commissions Support Clerk at 241-4919 at least five(5)working days prior to the meeting.
41
Board of Ethics—December 21, 2012
COUNTY OF KAUAI �bft"
Minutes of Meeting
OPEN SESSION
Board/Committee: BOARD OF ETHICS Meeting Date I November 16, 2012
Location Mo`ikeha Building, Liquor Conference Room 3 Start of Meeting: 1:31 p.m. End of Meeting: 4:18 p.m.
Present Chair Kurt Akamine; Vice-Chair Mark Hubbard; Secretary Warren Perry; Members: Calvin Murashige; Paul Weil
Also: Deputy County Attorney Mona Clark; Boards & Commissions Office Staff: Support Clerk Barbara Davis; Administrator Paula
Morikami
Audience Members: Tim Bynum, Councilmember; JoAnn Yukimura Council Vice Chair; Mauna Kea Trask, Deputy County
Attorney; Ken Taylor; Rob Abrew; Glenn Mickens
Excused Members: Kathy Clark; Brad Nagano
Absent
SUBJECT DISCUSSION ACTION
Call To Order Chair Akamine called the meeting to order at
1:31 p.m. with a quorum of 5 members present,
Chair Akamine stated following the approval of the minutes he would like to
go into Executive Session to allow Special Counsel to give a status report to
the Board. Following that report the meeting will return to Open Session.
Mr. Ken Taylor asked what agenda item(s)the Special Counsel was there for.
Chair Akamine stated it was for Executive Session and that was all he was able
to say.
Approval of Regular Open Session Minutes of October 12, 2012 Mr. Perry moved to approve the minutes as
Minutes circulated. Mr. Hubbard seconded the motion.
Motion carried 4:1 abstain-Weil
Executive Attorney Clark stated that the Board would be
Session going into Executive Session for items ES-2, ES-
3, and ES-8 as fully described in the posted
agenda. _
Chair Akamine asked if there was public testimony on the 3 items the Board
� fi
Board of Ethics
Open Session
November 16, 2012 Page 2
SUBJECT DISCUSSION ACTION
would be convening in Executive Session to discuss.
Ken Taylor—Mr. Taylor stated he would speak on ES-3 and with all due
respect to Deputy County Attorney Mona Clark, this item should not be
discussed with the County Attorney. Mr. Taylor believes there is a conflict
of interest with that office and the Board should have special counsel to deal
with this item. When a potential or perceived conflict of interest exists the f
best ethical and moral way to deal with it is to absent one's self. In our
situation, we had the County Attorney and the Council provide the
Prosecutor's Office with special counsel to deal with a particular issue and
the hearings lasted over 15 hours. The County Attorney was not only asked
to give opinions and public comments on the meeting but they also went
into closed session. Mr. Taylor said this was the crutch(sic) of the matter.
If there was a conflict and a need to hire outside counsel for the Prosecutor's
Office then the County Attorney behind that hiring has to look at all of the
activities. Mr. Taylor said he does not have a problem with someone
supporting a candidate. That is their choice but when they are in a decision
making position or giving opinions as to what the law should or shouldn't
be then it becomes a real problem. Mr. Castillo should have removed
himself.
Chair Akamine clarified that for this particular Executive Session the Board
would be addressing agenda item ES-3 and not his complaint which is item
ES-33. The Board will resume later in Executive Session to discuss item
ES-33. Mr. Weil explained that item ES-3 is listed in the agenda as a letter Mr. Perry moved to go into Executive Session at
dated November 25, 2011. 1:46 p.m. Mr. Hubbard seconded the motion.
Motion carried 5:0
Return to Open The meeting resumed in Open Session at 2:08 p.m.
The question arose as to whether the Board needed to ratify actions taken in
Executive Session on agenda items ES-2, ES-3 and ES-8. Mr. Perry said
Board of Ethics
Open Session
November 16, 2012 Page 3
SUBJECT DISCUSSION ACTION
there was discussion on these items but no official action was taken and
they are on-going so there should be no need to ratify actions taken in
Executive Session. Attorney Clark suggested returning to Executive
Session for the members to discuss their questions. Mr. Perry said this was
more a procedural thing and does not have anything to do with the substance
of the Executive Session.
Executive Mr. Murashige moved to return to Executive
Session Session at 2:11 p.m. Mr. Perry seconded the
motion. Motion carried 5:0
Return to Open The meeting returned to Open Session at 2:14
Session with a recess called. The meeting resumed at
2:19 p.m.
Request for An RAO 12-010 Letter dated 10/15/12 from Tim Bynum, Councilmember,
Advisory Kauai County Council requesting an expedited review and Advisory
Opinion Opinion relating to his participation in Council agenda items/Council issues
involving the Office of the Prosecuting Attorn ey
Mr. Bynum said he has again been challenged as to whether he has a
conflict, which he does not believe he does. He stated that everything he
does and says at the County Council is public record; he can be held
accountable to those statements and the community can decide if there is
any bias.
Mr. Perry stated that the Board also received a copy of the Federal District
Court complaint. Attorney Clark said she provided that information
because Mr. Bynum references it in his letter as to whether it causes a
conflict.
Mr. Bynum said in his letter he recognizes circumstances have changed
somewhat by the filing of the complaint and the complaint is public record
Board of Ethics
Open Session
November 16, 2012 Page 4
SUBJECT DISCUSSION ACTION
and speaks for itself. Mr. Bynum does not feel this puts him in a different
position in regard to whether he has a conflict at the County Council.
Ken Taylor—Mr. Taylor noted that Mr. Bynum did step down after another
person recently questioned whether Mr. Bynum had a conflict of interest.
Mr. Taylor believed there were two conflicts of interest, Mr. Bynum and
Mr. Castillo, at the October 17 meeting and therefore he is uncomfortable
having County Counsel representing these activities when there is this
conflict. Mr. Taylor suggests special counsel be brought in to deal with this
project and his complaint. Mr. Bynum did step down a couple of times and
then claimed there were no decisions being made,just discussion. Decision
making is not just the vote; a very important part of the decision making is
the discussion and opinions before voting. With the lawsuit Mr. Bynum has
against the County and the Prosecuting Attorney there is a potential or a
conceived(sic) conflict of interest. For the betterment of the community it
would be best for him to absent himself from any discussion until that
lawsuit is gone.
Mr. Murashige asked Mr. Taylor what happens with Mr. Bynum's role in
the County Council when there is a new Prosecuting Attorney sworn in on
December e. It would appear the conflict that is being addressed has to do
with the present Prosecuting Attorney so will there still be a conflict? Mr.
Taylor said Mr. Bynum's lawsuit does not go away on the 4`h and as long as
there is a lawsuit against the County and the Prosecutor, there is a conflict
for him to participate in any discussion. Mr. Murashige commented that
Mr. Bynum would be paid just to hold an elected position but not to
participate. Mr. Taylor said on any item that is in front of the Council that
deals with the Prosecuting Office. Mr. Murashige commented that Mr.
Bynum is suing the County as well so he cannot act on any County business.
Mr. Taylor said he had not thought about that but it may be another issue
Board of Ethics
Open Session
November 16, 2012 Page 5
SUBJECT DISCUSSION ACTION
and it is a difficult situation. Given a hypothetical situation of a
councilperson's family member is struck by a County vehicle and a lawsuit
is filed against the County, should that councilperson recuse themselves
from all County dealings? Mr. Taylor claimed it was a hypothetical
situation that they have not talked about but they would have to look at it Mr. Perry moved that the Board advise
very seriously and make a good judgment call on what is the proper thing. Councilmember Bynum that there is no conflict
of interest. Mr. Murashige seconded the
motion.
Mr. Hubbard said he was in favor but it needs to be worded as such to
answer his question that there is no conflict with his considering OPA's
request to apply for,receive, or expend State...............funds for the
POHAKU program,which he did; he recused himself. Mr. Hubbard wants
the Board of Ethics to say there was no conflict there but any items
involving OPA he did not know. There might be a conflict on other items
because we don't know what items are going to come up so we should not
say there is no conflict ever between Mr. Bynum and OPA. There is no
conflict with this request.
Mr. Perry said that was basically what his motion addresses. Mr. Perry cited
20.04 B any elected official.........who possesses or acquires such interest
as might reasonably tend to create a conflict with his duties or
authority,.........shall have a conflict or shall not participate. When you sue
someone you have a conflict. In some ways there is a conflict and yet the
reality of the situation and given the duties of the councilmember and the
prevalence of lawsuits Mr. Perry said there is no conflict.
Attorney Clark said 20.04 and the matter that is before the body and the
matter that would be before the body would be a specific agenda item such
as the budget or POHAKU. Does the lawsuit create a conflict as far as that;
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Open Session
November 16, 2012 Page 6
SUBJECT _ DISCUSSION ACTION
it is not clear that it does.
Chair Akamine said he does not see how Mr. Bynum's participation would
violate the Code of Ethics, §3-1.6 Fair Treatment.
Mr. Bynum said he hopes there is a presumption that there is no conflict
because if a situation arises where someone could question it he would be
back at square one. Also, Mr. Perry's characterization of going after
someone Mr. Bynum's frame would be holding people accountable to his
civil rights.
Mr. Weil thought Mr. Bynum did understand or certainly should understand
that if this motion passes it is not a blanket get-out-of-jail-free card; it refers
specifically to the matters in the motion as other situations may arise where Mr. Perry restated his motion that there is no
it would be incumbent upon him to recuse himself. conflict relative to the request from Mr. Bynum
for an Advisory Opinion on this matter. Motion
carried 5:0
RAO 12-009 Letter dated 10/2/12 from JoAnn A. Yukimura, Council Vice
Chair, Kaua'i County Council,requesting an Advisory_Opinion related to a
campaign donation from an applicant for a zoning amendment that will
come before the Council for decision-making in the next two months
JoAnn Yukimura—Ms. Yukimura said this is an important issue with all the
back-and-forth in Honolulu regarding campaign contributions from people
that may have a stake in issues that would come before the winning
candidate. One aspect of this issue is the Citizen's United Decision which
allows unlimited spending but on Kaua'i there is an ethics provision in our
Charter which could allow this Board to give some guidelines for the whole
issue of campaign donations from those who may have items coming before
the Council. The item which Ms. Yukimura referenced in her letter is
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Open Session
November 16, 2012 Page 7
SUBJECT DISCUSSION ACTION
before the County Council right now. It is within a month after the election
and the County Council is being called upon to make a decision affecting
the donor of these campaign monies. If this is a potential conflict of
interest,how many months before or how many months after the election
does it apply? If the Board does choose to say it is a potential conflict of
interest it would remove any appearance of conflict and the Board could set
up guidelines more broadly through the rule-making process which would
also take a lot of pressure off of developers. It would clear the air to say
within so many months of the election, before and after, it is a conflict of
interest to have contributions made by people who are coming before the
elected body. Ms. Yukimura said in the past she has made her own decision
not to accept these checks but it might be time for actual rulings and
guidelines. You might be able to define an amount but it would be simpler
to say no contribution.
Chair Akamine said the request before the Board is to make an Advisory
Opinion relative to this matter. Whether there will be any action taken to
make it clearer can be taken up later.
Mr. Perry said he would rather see a request for an Advisory Opinion at this
time rather than a complaint filed after the Council takes action on this
zoning amendment.
Mr. Weil asked if one of the real considerations isn't the public perception
and one of this Board's functions must be to protect officers of the County,
members of the Council, etc., with regard to public perception.
Ms. Yukimura agreed; the whole trust and confidence in government
operations is potentially affected by this.
Board of Ethics
Open Session
November 16, 2012 Page 8
SUBJECT DISCUSSION ACTION
Ken Taylor—Mr. Taylor said Ms. Yukimura has been around government a
long time and should know and understand the answer to the question being
asked. The perception is what is being dealt with and a conflict dealt with
properly is not a problem. While the money may have been given in good
faith that individual will come with a request for a decision and Ms.
Yukimura should remove herself from that decision making process.
Tim Bynum—Mr. Bynum said the Hawai'i State Campaign Spending
Commission has rules and all of the(donations) are public record. Certain
companies that don't make donations,particularly A&B and Grove Farm,
have a number of things that come before the Council in a given year
because their activities are in our community. If this was pretty broad there
would be very few members who could vote. Mr. Bynum said donations do
not influence his vote and everything is disclosed where people can make
their own judgments. Ms. Yukimura is saying this is a specific donor that
has a specific item forthcoming. If Mr. Bynum were ruling he would keep
it fairly narrow because if it is broad it has significant implications for the
way it has been and the way it will be in the future.
Rob Abrew—Mr. Abrew said if it can reasonably be inferred that the gift is
intended in the performance of his duties or intended as a reward,only that
person can make the decision when the issue comes in front of them. A
board cannot decide that for them. It is an individual's decision. The
consequence after, if someone has a complaint, is they bring that to the
board. Ms. Yukimura,bringing this to the board, thinks she has a
reasonable inference that this could be shown as a gift or received as a
compliment.
Attorney Clark said when talking about being reasonably inferred,the
Charter sets up a reasonable person standard,which would be an objective
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Open Session
November 16, 2012 Page 9
SUBJECT DISCUSSION ACTION
standard rather than a subjective standard. It should be evaluated not only
by the person and by what they feel but also by an objective standard based
on the facts and circumstances surrounding the situation.
JoAnn Yukimura—Ms. Yukimura said that comes from a huge body of law
and if this was just to be determined by the receiver you would not need an
Ethics Boardi and those who perceive one way get to act one way and those
who perceive the other way get to act the other way. It makes no sense as a
law. Ms. Yukimura said the remedy is not to recuse herself from acting on a
very important matter she has been elected to act on; the remedy is to not
accept the gift. Clear rules are needed that consistently govern behavior.
Disclosure in the Charter is very different than what is before the Board. It
is the Board who determines what those circumstances are in which it can
be reasonably inferred. The wording in the Charter tries to delineate or
preclude circumstances where there might be an influence in the decision
from a gift so that decision makers can be objective.
Mr. Murashige asked if the decision makers would not be objective
regardless of whether there was a gift or not. Ms. Yukimura replied not
necessarily; there is no assurance that it is an objective decision.
In isolating this instance only, Mr. Weil asked Ms. Yukimura if she should
now accept this donation, and if the answer is she should not accept it now,
attenuated to that is should Ms. Yukimura be able to accept it in the future.
If limiting the future,how long? While Ms. Yukimura is still in office?
While the matter is still before the Council? It can always be inferred if
given later it was a reward for her vote. It is not a simple problem.
Ms. Yukimura said there is a certain period and amount that is defined for
disclosures in elections. The influence is lessened as the time increases
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Open Session
November 16, 2012 Page 10
SUBJECT DISCUSSION ACTION
either after or before.
Chair Akamine said there are campaign spending laws that govern
contributions and wouldn't that be another body that would make the rules
clearer. This Board will take action on the Advisory Opinion before them
but it might be clearer for another body to determine if further actions are
needed. Ms. Yukimura said if the Board feels it comes under the ethics
ruling in the Charter, the Board has the leeway to define it for the County of
Kaua'i based on ethics laws. Campaign spending laws govern contributions
and their main philosophy is disclosure. This contribution is from a whole
other angle. It is whether the Board as well as the interpreter of the rules
thinks campaign contributions will or could influence decision making.
Glenn Mickens—Who, except the person, is going to know if a contribution
is influencing them to do something. That would be a tough decision for a
Board to make. Because Ms. Yukimura is here she must be saying in her
heart that there could be a conflict here.
Chair Akamine asked that everyone keep to the request on the agenda item
and not go beyond the bounds of that.
Tim Bynum- The current Hawai'i State laws about disclosure and limits are
sufficient to address this issue. When the Charter talks about receiving
gifts, Mr. Bynum thought that meant to items such as pound cakes,
calendars, and cookies from people who do business with the County. Mr.
Bynum stated he did not think that section of the Charter addressed
campaign contributions; it is addressing gifts that go directly or indirectly to
the elected official.
Ken Taylor—It was said earlier that one of the was to remedy the problem
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Open Session
November 16, 2012 Page 11
SUBJECT DISCUSSION ACTION
is not to accept the funds. The intent of everything that has taken place is
there so whether the money is accepted or not creates perceived problems. Mr. Perry moved that there is a conflict relative
to Ms. Yukimura's request for an Advisory
Opinion. Motion dies for lack of a second.
Mr. Hubbard moved that there is no conflict for
Ms. Yukimura's campaign organization, JoAnn
Yukimura's Many Friends to receive a check of
$250.00 from a corporate land owner that has
applied for a zoning amendment that will be
before the County Council in the next two
months. Motion dies for lack of a second.
JoAnn Yukimura—Ms. Yukimura said she was looking for guidance as to
whether she could accept the donation or not. Will it be a conflict of
interest to accept the check? Ms. Yukimura said she wanted advice to
govern her actions. Mr. Perry moved that the Board find that there is
a conflict relative to the request for an Advisory
Opinion on RAO 12-009. Mr. Weil seconded
the motion.
Mr. Perry said 20.02 states no officer or employee of the county
shall........receive anything, anything(emphasis by Mr. Perry)under
circumstances in which it can be reasonably inferred that the gift is intended
to influence future actions or past actions. But for the position in dealing
with these members as a county employee or officer,they would not have
received the fruitcake. The County Council played with the Code of
Ordinances §3-1.4 and said an occasional non pecuniary gift, insignificant
in value, or an award publicly presented but that is contradictory to the
clear wording of the Charter which is.....do not receive anything(emphasis
by Mr. Perry)under the circumstances where it can reasonably be inferred.
The $250.00 can be reasonably inferred to either reward Ms. Yukimura for
Board of Ethics
Open Session
November 16, 2012 Page 12
SUBJECT DISCUSSION ACTION
actions that have been taken or to influence her in actions that will be taken.
No one can tell how someone else perceives things. Mr. Perry said he will
not put himself in a position to tell how people perceive things,much less
public perception, and will not be held to that standard sitting as a member
of the Board of Ethics. Mr. Perry said he would sit and apply the Code of
Ethics to any situation that is appropriately brought before the Board.
Mr. Weil did not fully agree with Mr. Perry but thought the Board could
reasonably perceive that public perception will frown upon acceptance of
gifts at a time when a matter is pending on which the receiver is going to act
so it is not difficult to see what public perception would be.
Mr. Hubbard stated he was opposed to this motion. The campaign spending
laws guide campaign spending. If the Board says this is a conflict then it
would seem someone could donate to a candidate but not to an incumbent
because their stuff might come before the County Council. Mr. Hubbard
said they should depend on the campaign spending laws to guide them and
did not think there was a conflict.
Mr. Murashige tended to agree with Mr. Hubbard. Each elected official
should vote his or her conscious in terms of matters coming before the
Council. The public will perceive things the way the public wants to
perceive but it is up to the official to decide whether or not having received
a campaign contribution is impacting his or her vote.
Mr. Perry said this Board has the Charter and the Code of Ordinances to
interpret. The Code of Ordinances changes the intent of the clear wording
of the Charter. The Charter says you do not receive anything under
circumstances where it can be reasonably inferred that it will be for future
actions or past actions. Right now the issue is a campaign committee
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Open Session
November 16, 2012 Page 13
SUBJECT DISCUSSION ACTION
receiving money only because of Ms. Yukimura's position as a County
elected official. That presents a reasonable inference that it was intended to
affect future decisions or past decisions. Roll Call Vote: Hubbard—Nay; Murashige—
Nay; Perry—Aye; Weil—Aye; Akamine—Nay
Motion failed 2 ayes; 3 nays
Mr. Hubbard moved that there is no conflict
relative to Ms. Yukimura's request for an
Advisory Opinion. Mr. Weil seconded the
motion.
Attorney Clark said one of the things the Board is going back and forth with
is whether there is a question of preemption by the election laws for this
matter. That is something that could be researched if the Board wishes to
defer this request. Roll Call Vote: Hubbard—aye; Murashige—
Aye; Perry—Nay; Weil—aye; Akamine—aye
Motion carried 4 ayes; 1 nay
RAO 12-011 Letter dated 11/2/12 from Deputy County Attorney Mauna
Kea Trask as legal counsel for the Kaua'i Fire Department as to whether a
revised request for a proposed reality show based on the 2013 Kaua'i Junior
Lifeguard squad and the attendant areas of support being requested to be
provided by the County are allowable under the County of Kauai Code of
Ethics
Deputy County Attorney Trask said he took the prior advice of the Board
and scrubbed the request to make it clear what the County's involvement is.
The production company will do anything and everything on their own
without any remuneration or compensation to the County of Kaua'i or the
Kaua'i Lifeguard Association. Notwithstanding they will rely on the County
to provide them with information,help identify content for their series,help
prioritize the message that will reach their audience and give them advice
Board of Ethics
Open Session
November 16, 2012 Page 14
SUBJECT DISCUSSION ACTION
when needed. Attorney Trask said that was important given the Ocean
Safety Bureau is in charge of ocean safety for the County of Kaua'i and they
have an unparalleled knowledge in that aspect. There is no need for
commitment of materials, funds, manpower and/or technical expertise. The
production company is happy with this and understands the discussion. Mr. Perry moved that the Board find there is no
conflict relative to the request RAO 12-011. Mr.
Hubbard seconded the motion. Motion carried
4:1 (Weil—abstain)
Mr. Weil explained that he did not have the opportunity to hear the
discussion at the last meeting and did not feel qualified to vote on the issue.
Business BOE 2012-17 Discussion and possible decision-making fadopting
Robert's Rules of Order.Newly Revised for matters of procedure governing
the conduct of Board meetings not addressed by the Board's Rules.
(Deferred from 10/19/12)
Chair Akamine said after some of the proceedings at previous meetings he
recognized that the Board does follow parliamentary procedures but this
Board has never adopted the Robert's Rules of Order, which leaves a lot of
power or discretion to the Chair to run the meeting. Chair Akamine thought
it would be prudent for the Board to adopt Robert's Rules. Mr. Weil moved to adopt Robert's Rules. Mr.
Perry seconded the motion.
Attorney Clark said to adopt Robert's Rules the Board would need to go
through the rule-making procedure. Motion carried 4:1 Hubbard—nay)
Executive Attorney Clark stated that the Board would be
Session going into Executive Session for items ES-32,
ES-7, ES-16 and ES-33 as fully described in the
posted agenda.
Mr. Perry moved to go into Executive Session at
Board of Ethics
Open Session
November 16, 2012 Page 15
SUBJECT DISCUSSION ACTION
3:26 p.m. Mr. Murashige seconded the motion.
Recess: 3:27 p.m. The meeting resumed at 3:32
p.m.
Chair Akamine asked for public testimony on those items specified for this
Executive Session.
Attorney Clark noted to any members of the audience who will be testifying
in Open Session on item ES-33 that she will be recusing herself from that
matter. Attorney Clark also stated that she did not think she should review
ES-33 of the Executive Session minutes.
Glenn Mickens—Mr. Mickens stated that Mr. Castillo used his position to
secure a special benefit to obtain political advantage for his Deputy County
Attorney Justin Kollar. A calculated political vendetta has been waged
against our Office of the Prosecuting Attorney. Mr. Mickens stated that Mr.
Castillo has every right to freedom of speech and to vote for whomever he
wants but when his position has even the appearance of a conflict he should
recuse himself.
Ken Taylor—Mr. Taylor explained that after they asked for clarification, the
County Council referred (Mr. Mickens and Mr. Taylor)to the Board of
Ethics. Additional information received since filing the complaint shows
possibly that due diligence that should have taken place between Mr.
Castillo and the Prosecutor's Office before settlements were made did not
take place. That is part of the problem. When asked what the conflict is,
there are a number of them but the picture included with the documents is
certainly one of them. Additional information gathered also sheds light on
the activity. Mr. Taylor stated it was imperative that the Board get outside
counsel to look at this and other documents they have available.
Board of Ethics
Open Session
November 16, 2012 Page 16
SUBJECT DISCUSSION ACTION
Mr. Murashige noted that Mr. Taylor had mentioned the Hawai'i Rules of
Professional Conduct which governs the conduct of attorneys and asked if
they had filed a complaint with the Office of Disciplinary Council. Mr.
Taylor said they were in the process of discussing that now. Mr. Perry
added that was the Office to take care of this type of complaint and not this
Board.
Chair Akamine explained that when complaints are brought to the Board of
Ethics they are treated as a confidential matter. However, it came to Chair
Akamine's knowledge that everyone knows about the complaint through
media blogs. Chair Akamine asked if Mr. Taylor and Mr. Mickens held this
complaint in confidence or did they make the complaint public knowledge.
Not understanding the question, Chair Akamine rephrased it by asking if
they made the complaint public. Mr. Taylor said after he filed the document
with Barbara's office, this file was given to others; yes. Motion to go into Executive Session at 3:46 p.m.
_ carried 5:0
Return to Open The meeting resumed in Open Session at 4:16
Session p.m.
Ratify Board of Ethics actions taken in Executive Session for items:
ES-2, ES-3, ES-7, ES-8, ES-16, ES-32 and ES-33 Mr. Perry moved to ratify the Board's actions
taken in Executive Session. Mr. Murashige
seconded the motion. Motion carried 5:0
Announcements Next meeting: Friday, December 21, 2012— 1:30 p.m.
Adjournment Chair Akamine adjourned the meeting at 4:18
p.m.
Submitted by: Reviewed and Approved by:
Barbara Davis, Staff Support Clerk Kurt Akamine, Chair
( ) Approved as is. ( ) Approved with amendments. See minutes of meeting.
RULE 13. PARLIAMENTARY AUTHORITY
Meetings shall be conducted in accordance with the Hawaii Revised
Statutes,the Sunshine Law and procedures established in these Rules. On
all matters of procedure not addressed in these Rules,the Commission
may refer to Robert's Rules of Order,Newly Revised, for guidance in
developing procedures for the conduct of Board meetings.
Note: New rules adopted to proceed to rule-making and public hearing are
underscored
Kauai County
Board of Ethics
Part II
Interpretive Rules
Rule 1: General Provisions
1.1 Purpose
These rules are intended to provide clarity as to the interpretation of Article XX of the
Charter.
1.2 Compliance with Section 20.02D. Section 20.02D states: "No officer or employee of
the County shall appear in behalf of private interests before any County board,
commission or agency." The following definitions shall apply to the interpretation
Charter section:
a) Officer—the term"officer"shall include the following: (1)Mayor and members of the
council; (2)Any person appointed as administrative head of any agency of the county or
as a member of any board or commission; (3)The first deputy appointed by the
administrative head of any department; and (4) Deputies of the county attorney. It
clarifies that while the definition includes members of County(and not State)boards and
commissions, it does not include members of County or State sanctioned Advisory
Committees/Boards which are not authorized under the Charter.
b) Employee—the term"employee" shall mean any person, except an officer, employed
by the county or any department thereof
c) Appear—the term"appear" shall mean the providing of oral or written testimony at a
publicly noticed meeting or hearing of a board, commission, council or agency. Written
or oral communication with agencies outside of a publicly noticed meeting or hearing
shall not constitute an appearance. This interpretation shall not prohibit:
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COUNTY OF KAUAI
BOARD OF ETHICS
2013 Meeting Schedule
January 18
February 15
March 15
April 19
May 17
June 21
July 19
August 23 ** 4th Friday
September 20
October 18
November 15
December 20
Meetings are scheduled to start at 1:30 p.m. on the third Friday of each month.
BOE 2012-19
4444 Rice Street, Suite 150 • Lihu`e, Hawaii 96766* (808)241-4919• Fax(808)241-5127