In Wichita, a problem with government ethics

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Wichita and Kansas lag behind states like Illinois and New Jersey in laws regarding ethical behavior by elected officials. Last week Wichita saw a lesson in how Wichita Mayor Carl Brewer and a majority of the Wichita City Council failed a test in government ethics. Besides Brewer, long-serving council members Jeff Longwell (district 5, west and northwest Wichita) and Lavonta Williams (district 1, northeast Wichita), as well as Vice Mayor Janet Miller (district 6, north central Wichita) have also displayed a callous disregard for ethical behavior by government officials.

Today I appeared on the KAKE Television public affairs program This Week in Kansas and explained the recent incidents that ought to cause Wichitans and Kansans to insist on reform regarding government ethics. Pay-to-play laws would be a good start. See Wichita and Kansas need pay-to-play laws.

For earlier reporting on this matter, see Wichita City Council can’t judge airport contract and Wichita fails ethics test.

Comments

One response to “In Wichita, a problem with government ethics”

  1. Benjamin

    Perhaps the election of a new District Attorney will help the situation by bringing charges against the City and its elected officials. Remember, Mayor Brewer, alone, has been a participant in three separate Open Meeting Violations, but has never been charge with anything by our present DA

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