A draft commission policy on conflicts of interest, financial disclosure and ethics drew sustained debate on Nov. 18 and was referred back to the Fiscal Committee for further drafting.
City Attorney staff presented a proposed policy modeled in part on state disclosure frameworks but with higher thresholds intended to reduce trivial disclosures. Commissioners raised several issues: whether to require inclusion of spouse or partner assets and income (and whether to name partners publicly), how to define and threshold disclosure of business partners and contractual relationships, privacy concerns over listing addresses, and the administrative burden of implementation.
Mayor and several commissioners argued that spousal and partner information should be consistently included to prevent easy evasion of disclosure by shifting ownership, while others cautioned about privacy and unintended consequences for family members who did not run for office. Commissioners also asked the city attorney to develop thresholds and clear definitions for "business partner" and ownership percentages; the attorney recommended further committee work and legal review before adoption.
The commission chair asked for the original motion to be withdrawn; commissioners agreed by consent to send the draft back to fiscal committee and the city attorney for additional work and for staff to address the points raised in the convening discussion.