Ethics in Public Service Act

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Presentation transcript:

Ethics in Public Service Act Presented by: Heather Lopez Chief Audit Executive/WSU Ethics Advisor Office of Internal Audit March 2019

What Does it Mean to be Ethical? To conform to the standards of conduct of a given profession or group What are the minimum standards of conduct applicable to Washington State University employees and officers? Washington State Employees and Officers Ethics in Public Service Act, RCW 42.52

Faculty Code of Professional Ethics Obligations derived from membership in the University Community Expectation that faculty have deep conviction to advance knowledge Obligation to exercise critical self-discipline and intellectual honesty Encourage free pursuit of learning by students

Essential Resources Faculty Manual RCW 42.52 State Ethics Act EEB webpage WAC 292-110 BPPM 10.21, 10.22 - Ethics Act and Violations BPPM 20.37 – Personal Use of State Resources EP 4 – Electronic Data Policy EP 27 – Technology Transfer

4/18/2019 Core Principle Public office – whether elected or appointed – may not be used for personal gain or private advantage No matter how tempting . . . All state officers and employees have a duty to ensure the proper stewardship of state resources. State resources under your control may not be used for the private benefit or gain of a state employee, officer, or another employee, person or organization. Template-WSU Hrz 201.ppt

Key Areas of State Ethics Laws Use of state resources Conflicts of interest Special privileges Gifts Outside compensation Confidential information

Use of State Resources State resources are to be used for the conduct of state business only. State resources include: Equipment/materials/supplies Network Data Facilities Personnel/time

De Minimis (Minimal) Use The EEB allows personal de minimis use so long as you do not use resources for any of the prohibited purposes. De minimis use is infrequent, occasional, personal use resulting in little or no cost to WSU and no disruption of WSU employees or operations.

Prohibited Uses Conducting outside business or private employment Supporting, promoting, or soliciting for an outside organization or group (unless approved by University official designee) Promoting or opposing a candidate for office or a ballot proposition Lobbying unless assigned by WSU Use of property away from WSU Any use prohibited by law or WSU policy

EP 4 – Electronic Communication Policy 4/18/2019 EP 4 – Electronic Communication Policy WSU may ask that employees maintain work-related, approved social media accounts or blogs Can be managed and updated during business hours Professional v. Private: personal networking sites should remain personal and not used for work-related purposes; no university account should be used to maintain personal social network accounts Protect your wsu.edu good name Any communication can become a public record Template-WSU Hrz 201.ppt

Political campaigns, candidates and initiatives Basic Rule: A state employee may not use state resources for political campaigns. This prohibition applies to knowing acquiescence: A state employee, with authority to direct, control, or influence the actions of another employee, may not knowingly acquiesce in the other employee’s use of state resources for a political campaign.

Confidential Information RCW 42.52.050 - Confidential Information (1) Public employees must take care to protect confidential information acquired due to position (2) Cannot accept employment or engage in business that might reasonably expect unauthorized disclosure of confidential information RCW 42.52.050 - Public Records (4) Failure to produce responsive records Public records officer has short timeline for return

Copyright WSU Faculty Manual IV.H.2.a.1, states: Work Made for Hire. Except as otherwise provided in the Employee Ownership of Copyrighted Works section of this Policy, IV.H.2.b of this manual or as otherwise provided in WSU policy, the University shall own all copyrightable works that were created as a “work made for hire.” The Copyright Act definition of “Work made for hire,” includes: (1) works prepared by University employees within the employee’s scope of employment, or (2) works not created within the employee’s scope of employment but that are specially commissioned by the University pursuant to a written agreement that is signed by both the University and the employee.

Copyright, continued The University shall not assert ownership in the following works created by employees within the employee’s scope of employment including, but not necessarily limited to, the following: a) scholarly material, b) educational material (e.g., text books), c) art works, d) musical compositions, e) sound recordings, f) dramatic and nondramatic literary works, and g) creative works fixed in a film, video, or other media. Unless (1) substantial kinds or amounts of University resources were used to create the works

Use of Faculty Authored, Edited or Prepared Scholarly Material Faculty Manual IV.I Requiring use of faculty authored materials must only be done to promote appropriate educational goals. Faculty members may not sell any materials directly to students. Students may be required to use textbooks or other material written by WSU faculty only if there is no financial gain or there is appropriate external review.

Honoraria Definition: money or thing of value offered to state employee or officer for a speech, appearance, article, or similar item or activity in connection with official role. RCW 42.52.130: State employees may not receive honoraria unless authorized by agency. BPPM 20.37 and Faculty Manual II.D.3 provide the authorization for faculty to accept appropriate honoraria as related to academic and community outreach.

Honoraria - Exceptions Exceptions to accepting honoraria if conditions present that create or appear to create a conflict of interest or influence, including: Related contract Regulation Legislation or administrative rules or actions

Contracts/Outside Compensation General rule – state employees cannot accept anything of economic value outside official duties. Application – employees can have a beneficial interest in a personal contract or grant if no conflict with duties and no use of position to secure or influence the contract. State contracts – must get approval from EEB unless open to competitive bid.

Outside Compensated Services Faculty Manual IV.D Cannot interfere with employee’s performance of University duties – chair determination No conflict of interest University facilities may not be used in connection with compensated outside professionally-related service work Full-time faculty (consulting/service: 1 in 5) Must disclose promptly to chair (in writing, 5 days) Report annually, November 1, BPPM 60.44

Extended Professional Activities Faculty Manual IV.E Supervisor (chair) approval is required for commercial enterprise-related activities closely related to University work: Ownership or substantial equity position Line management position Participation in day-to-day operations Transfer of non-patented technology/potentially marketable information developed in University research program (also requires Intellectual Property Committee approval)

Conflict of Interest – Technology Transfer RCW 42.52.220 Allows conditional use of University resources for approved technology transfer activities EP 27 Ethics, Conflicts of Interest and Technology Transfer Limited to research employees: Faculty whose terms of employment and advancement include contributions via scholarly research Employee or graduate student responsible for designing, conducting or reporting research

4/18/2019 More - EP 27 If actual or perceived conflict of interest, chair refers to Research Compliance Office and COI Committee. EP 27 permits some use of University resources for research employees outside technology transfer activities: Approved under Faculty Manual, BPPM 60.44 No conflict of interest Approved sponsored research agreement or service center agreement A different process for start-up firms Template-WSU Hrz 201.ppt

Nepotism/Special Privileges 4/18/2019 Nepotism/Special Privileges BPPM 60.14, Faculty Manual A state employee may not use his or her official position to secure special privileges for himself or herself or any other person. Cannot make decisions which may directly affect appointment, tenure, promotion, salary or any other status of interest of parent, child, spouse, domestic partner, sibling, in-law or close relative. Disclosure of relation with someone in supervisory chain is required to minimize conflicts of interest. Template-WSU Hrz 201.ppt

Gifts Avoid accepting gift or special privilege if it could be reasonably expected that the gift or favor is offered to influence the vote, action, judgement of the employee or is considered part of a reward for action or inaction. As a general rule, do not accept gifts from students and/or their parents. If no influence or ‘reward,’ there is a $50 value limit.

Not ‘Gifts’ Gifts do not include: Example: Items from family and friends with clear purpose not to influence Promotional items Items exchanged at social events by coworkers Reasonable expenses for a speech or seminar Discounts available to individuals as a member of a broad-based group. Example: Discount Mariner tickets for state employees

More on Gifts Section 4, RCW 42.52.150(4): What to do with gift: If your duties include decisions about contracting or purchasing, Section 4 restrictions apply to gifts from past, current or potential future contractors or vendors Section 4 employees may not accept gifts, limited exception What to do with gift: Return within 30 days Donate to charity Accept on behalf of office or department Make a record of disposition

Determination of Ethics Issue Is employee acting in the best interests of the employer? Are decisions regarding contracts or use of resources made for personal convenience or administrative/ employer convenience? If suspect actions or use for other than official duties, contact administrator, Internal Audit, EEB or SAO.

Examples Special Government Rate at Hotel Business Card Can you accept if official travel runs over into personal? Per EEB FAQ, you can if the rate is offered to all government employees whether they are in official status or not. Business Card State business cards are a University resource and cannot be used for personal gain. EEB Advisory 98-10 advises should not be used in drawings to gain personal gifts (e.g., drawing at local restaurant for free meal, drawing at conference to win prizes).

More Examples Door Prize As registered attendee of unit-paid conference, your name may be entered in door drawings for prizes. If name drawn, must determine if prize can be used by unit for official purpose (state paid for the conference, so prize belongs to state). If cannot, then donate to charity or return without ethics violation. At conference, nominal gifts presented to all attendees (e.g., pens, notepads, portfolios) are allowed since offered to everyone. Ethics Advisory 98-10

More Examples Service on Board Faculty members cannot use state resources in performance of compensated outside services on a board or paid consulting activity (Faculty Manual IV,d.2.f). If service on a board is not part of official duties (and approved as such by person with authority to approve) then no state resources may be used associated with that service (not even de minimis). If service on board considered approved part of official duties, de minimis use of resources okay. AAG opinion, 1/27/10

Personal Responsibility As a University employee, you are: Responsible to know the law - ignorance is no defense Personally liable Subject to penalties by the State Auditor’s Office, Executive Ethics Board (EEB), employing agency

4/18/2019 Contact Information WSU Internal Audit Heather Lopez, Chief Audit Executive www.internalaudit.wsu.edu, 335-2001 Assistant Attorney General Adam Malcolm, 335-2636 Executive Ethics Board www.ethics.wa.gov Template-WSU Hrz 201.ppt