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View attachment 32449 Uncle...
>>Angry at what it’s chairman called “stealth” legislation, the state ethics commission held an emergency meeting Tuesday to discuss what legal recourse it might have after learning that top legislators quietly added an amendment to a bill that appears to ensure that UConn football coach Randy Edsall’s son can remain on his father’s staff.<<
>>Tuesday’s teleconference call was immediately adjourned to an executive session that lasted more than an hour to discuss the legal ramifications of the new law as it applies to not only the Edsall case but also for the future of the board.
Neither Castricone or executive director would comment on what the board had discussed or what their legal strategy will be going forward.<<
Forgive me twice but I think you have things bass akwards on this one...I guess you do not realize that the state's largest newspaper is supposed to lead the state on important issues via the editorial page.
No attack but YIKES.... I never realized this... Which writer should I have voted for in the last election?
The solution to the state's economic woes are linked to the viable future of UConn.
Happens all of he time. Ask your mayor/first selectman how much money your town got through this type of move.Slipping unrelated amendments in to a bill... not usually a fan! But in this case I love it.
If we are talking about appropriations, the term is earmark. My sense is that big cities have the political power to get earmarks, but I am not sure that "all the time" would be accurate. Sometimes small towns get them for special needs, for instance if there is a pond being infested with invasive species that need eradication for which they might need aid.Happens all of he time. Ask your mayor/first selectman how much money your town got through this type of move.
Ethics Board Says Secret Amendment To Benefit Edsall “An Affront To All Connecticut Citizens”
>>The statement signed by every member of the Citizen’s Ethics Advisory Board goes onto say the legislation “passed in the darkness” of the waning days of the last legislative session “weakens the Code of Ethics by opening the door to nepotism not just in the football program but throughout Connecticut state universities and community colleges as well as the University of Connecticut. It also creates a double standard permitting nepotism in the state college and university system while continuing to prohibit it throughout the rest of state government. And make no mistake, taxpayers will bear the cost of this erosion of accountability.”<<
Ethics Board Says Secret Amendment To Benefit Edsall “An Affront To All Connecticut Citizens”
>>The statement signed by every member of the Citizen’s Ethics Advisory Board goes onto say the legislation “passed in the darkness” of the waning days of the last legislative session “weakens the Code of Ethics by opening the door to nepotism not just in the football program but throughout Connecticut state universities and community colleges as well as the University of Connecticut. It also creates a double standard permitting nepotism in the state college and university system while continuing to prohibit it throughout the rest of state government. And make no mistake, taxpayers will bear the cost of this erosion of accountability.”<<
... But by the same token I do not see why the coaching staff had to be treated as employees. Just outsource the function and be done with it.
Personally, I do not see it and I am unclear why people are so upset about what the Ethics Board did. Seems like a clear cut case to me. The law did not allow for exceptions. They could not have created one if they had wanted to.
But by the same token I do not see why the coaching staff had to be treated as employees. Just outsource the function and be done with it.
Yeah. I worked at the legislature for a session. Take a look at the “implementer” bill someday. Passes every year and is absolutely loaded with stuff. This was simply politics. The ethics board over reached and got slapped down. Nothing more. But if you think this was the only rat this session, well I have a great deal for you on a bridge and you don’t even have to go to Brooklyn. Middletown or Portland will do. Just that mostly nobody hears about them because they involve such exciting things as sale of 200 square feet to Richard in Coventry.If we are talking about appropriations, the term is earmark. My sense is that big cities have the political power to get earmarks, but I am not sure that "all the time" would be accurate. Sometimes small towns get them for special needs, for instance if there is a pond being infested with invasive species that need eradication for which they might need aid.
In Congress earmarking got out of control until there was a massive reaction to it and they became much harder. Nonetheless they still happen under various guises.
Rats are a bit different. My understanding is that they are usually non-appropriation related and are inserted into bills dealing with completely different subjects. Kinda like slipping in something about immigration into the defense appropriation bill. Maybe three lines into a 2,000 page bill.
The hiring and supervision of Corey was entirely acceptable under CT ethics rules. The committee actually gave an advisory opinion to UConn stating that. They only changed there minds after they found out that facts related to football. In order to find it in violation, the ethics board created two fictions:Personally, I do not see it and I am unclear why people are so upset about what the Ethics Board did. Seems like a clear cut case to me. The law did not allow for exceptions. They could not have created one if they had wanted to.
Absolutely not. The Ethics Board did exactly what it was supposed to do. Do I have a problem with Corey working for his father? Absolutely not as long as it is not as an employee of the State.The ethics board over reached and got slapped down. Nothing more.
You sound like a lawyer or someone who plays one on TV. The reporting arrangement is a sham. The AD has no power in this arrangement short of firing the HC. Read Kevin Rennie today.The hiring and supervision of Corey was entirely acceptable under CT ethics rules. The committee actually gave an advisory opinion to UConn stating that. They only changed there minds after they found out that facts related to football. In order to find it in violation, the ethics board created two fictions:
1) The board arbitrarily decided that Randy was employee before his start date. Without doing that there is no violation.
2) The board arbitrarily chose to ignore that Corey reported to the athletic director and not to Randy calling it a sham. Without doing that there is no violation.
I'm not sure what drove the board to that but they would have lost if it went to trial. The legislature fixing that overreach was entirely inappropriate. I would have preferred that they did it more openly though.
You sound like a lawyer or someone who plays one on TV. The reporting arrangement is a sham. The AD has no power in this arrangement short of firing the HC. Read Kevin Rennie today.
The hiring and supervision of Corey was entirely acceptable under CT ethics rules. The committee actually gave an advisory opinion to UConn stating that. They only changed there minds after they found out that facts related to football. In order to find it in violation, the ethics board created two fictions:
1) The board arbitrarily decided that Randy was employee before his start date. Without doing that there is no violation.
2) The board arbitrarily chose to ignore that Corey reported to the athletic director and not to Randy calling it a sham. Without doing that there is no violation.
I'm not sure what drove the board to that but they would have lost if it went to trial. The legislature fixing that overreach was entirely inappropriate. I would have preferred that they did it more openly though.
The issue with comment 1) above is that the hiring of Corey was incorporated into Randy's contract which was obviously drafted before his start date. This showed an intent regardless of whether Randy was truly and employee of the State at the time.
Hmmm, insult or compliment?You sound like a lawyer or someone who plays one on TV.
No, Benedict had direct hire/fire, promotion/salary authority. Now I understand why you and the ethics committee want to pretend otherwise in order to fabricate an argument against the Edsall and UConn, but it isn't reality based.The reporting arrangement is a sham. The AD has no power in this arrangement short of firing the HC.
Read Kevin Rennie today.
Riiight. And how about that bridge I have listed on eBay? I'll give you 50% off twice the price.No, Benedict had direct hire/fire, promotion/salary authority. Now I understand why you and the ethics committee want to pretend otherwise in order to fabricate an argument against the Edsall and UConn, but it isn't reality based.