Purpose:
This policy is intended to ensure an environment where employees
understand that they hold a public trust. This trust obligates
them to a) conduct the business of the institution in accordance
with the highest ethical standards, b) not use their public office
for personal gain or private advantage, and c) avoid activities
that conflict with the proper discharge of their duties.
Employees are required to:
- Serve the public with respect, concern, courtesy and responsiveness,
recognizing that service to the public is the primary mission
of state government.
- Promote an environment of public trust free from fraud,
abuse of authority and misuse of public property.
- Strengthen public confidence in the integrity of state government
by demonstrating the highest standards of personal integrity,
fairness, honesty and compliance with law, rules, regulations
and GRCC policies.
- Interact with co-workers with respect, concern, courtesy,
and responsiveness.
- Create a work environment that is free from all forms of
discrimination and harassment.
Scope:
This policy shall apply to all employees and officers of the college.
Definitions:
Employee: Individuals who are employed by Green River Community
College, including student employees and volunteers.
Officer of the college: Members of the Board of Trustees.
De minimis: Minimal in duration and frequency with no actual
cost to the state or the cost is so small as to be insignificant
or negligible.
Gifts: Anything of economic value for which no consideration
is given in return, with specified exceptions. These exceptions
include certain items received from family members or friends, certain
items related to an outside business, items exchanged among co-workers,
etc.
Honoraria: An honorarium refers to money or a thing of value
that is offered to an employee or officer of the college for a speech,
appearance, article, or similar item of activity in connection with
the employee’s official role with the institution.
Policy or Procedure:
1. ETHICS CATEGORIES
Use of State Resources for Personal Benefit
Employees and officers of the college
are obligated to conserve and protect state resources for the benefit
of the public interest, rather than their private interests.
No state employee or officer of the college may employ or use any
person, money or property under the employee’s official control
or direction, or in his or her official custody, for the private
benefit or gain of the employee, officer of the college or another.
The restrictions set forth by RCW 42.52.160 are designed to prohibit
the use of state resources for private purposes.
An employee or officer of the college can make occasional but
limited use of state resources for private use provided that:
There is no cost to the state and,
There is no interference with the performance of official duties
and,
The use is brief in duration and does not disrupt state business
due to volume or frequency and,
The use does not compromise the security or integrity of state
information or software.
De minimis use is permitted for the telephone, computer, fax,
email and Internet provided that the use is not for personal gain,
such as conducting an outside business; for political or campaign
activities; or illegal. Personal use of the state SCAN long-distance
telephone system is not permitted.
Certain uses of state resources are prohibited regardless of
whether the use is de minimis and does not interfere with the performance
of official duties. State law prohibits the use of state resources
for conducting an outside business; supporting, promoting, or soliciting
funds for an outside group or organization without authorization;
political or campaign use; commercial purposes; or illegal activity.
The personal use of state resources that are removed from campus,
such as, but not limited to, tools, computers, video recorders,
vehicles, and cameras is not permitted. Employees may not
reimburse the state so that there is no actual cost to the state,
although in limited situations a system of reimbursement may be
established by the college in advance and approved by the Executive
Ethics Board.
Gifts
Employees and officers of the college are prohibited from accepting
a gift, gratuity or item of value if it could be reasonably expected
to influence an action, judgment or vote. In addition, no
employee or officer of the college may accept gifts with a collective
value in excess of fifty ($50) dollars from a single source in a
calendar year or a single gift from multiple sources with a value
in excess of fifty ($50) dollars. The values of gifts given
to family members are ordinarily attributed to the employee for
the purpose of determining whether the limit has been exceeded.
For employees or state officers other than those who participate
in the acquisition of goods or services, there are general exceptions
to the gift limit. These permit employees to accept, among
other things, unsolicited tokens of appreciation such as plaques
and desk items, flowers and plants, gifts from dignitaries in another
state or country intended to be personal in nature.
Post State Employment
Post-state employment restrictions are designed to ensure that a
former employee or officers of the college does not accrue advantage
as a result of decisions or actions made while in public service.
Post-state employment restrictions fall into three categories.
- Contract restrictions prohibit former employees from accepting
employment or compensation if (A) during the two years preceding
termination of state employment, they were involved in negotiation
or administration of a contract with that employer and in a
position to make outcome-affecting discretionary decisions,
(B) the contract (s) is/are worth over $10,000, and (C) the
employment or compensation relate to the fulfilling or implementation
of that contract.
- Beneficial interest restrictions prohibit a former employee,
during the two years following termination of state employment,
from having a “beneficial” (financial) interest in a grant or
contract that was authorized or funded by an action in which
s/he participated while in state employment.
- Continuing restrictions, which have no statutorily-defined
time limit, prohibit former state employees from, among other
things, accepting employment or compensation that they have
reason to believe, or that a reasonable person would believe,
was intended to influence or compensate their performance or
non-performance of official duties.
Honoraria
No college employee may receive an honorarium unless specifically
authorized by the college. The college may not authorize an
honorarium in certain circumstances:
- The person offering the honorarium is seeking or is reasonably
expected to seek a contract or grant from the college, and the
employee is in a position to participate in determining the
terms or awarding of the contract or grant.
- The person offering the honorarium is likely to seek or
oppose adoption of college rules, actions, or policy changes,
and the person receiving the honorarium may participate in that
adoption.
Employees may use state time and resources to prepare materials
for a speech or presentation for which an honorarium will be awarded
if the activity is related to the employee's official role in state
employment. If it is not connected to one's official role, any payment
received is not an honorarium; rather it is considered outside compensation
subject to RCW 42.52.120.
If an honorarium includes payment for travel, lodging or subsistence
expenses, the employee cannot also seek or accept college reimbursement
of such expenses.
Compensation for Outside Activities
An employee or officer of the college may not receive any thing
of economic value under any contract or grant outside of his/her
official duties, unless certain conditions are met. This provision
prohibits outside employment or other arrangements that might become
a conflict or have the appearance of a conflict.
The conditions under which outside compensation may be received
are:
- The contract is bona fide and the work is actually performed.
- The performance or administration of the contract or grant
is not within the employee's official duties at the college
or under the employee’s official supervision.
- The work is not prohibited by other statutes, such as the
prohibition on assisting others in transactions involving the
state.
- The contract or grant is not performed for or compensated
by anyone from whom the employee could not receive a gift under
RCW 42.52.110 (applicable to employees who handle acquisitions).
- The grant or contract is not created or authorized by the
employee in his/her official capacity.
- The work would not require unauthorized disclosure of confidential
information obtained through college employment.
If the outside contract or grant is with another state agency,
additional requirements must be met. Essentially these mean that
there must be either an open bidding process with more than one
competitor, or prior approval from the Executive Ethics Board. Such
a contract or grant with a state agency generally must be filed
with the Executive Ethics Board within thirty days after signing.
Financial Interest in Transactions
Employees or officers of the college may not be beneficially (financially)
interested in contracts, sales, leases, purchases, or grants that
they make, or that are made under their supervision, as state employees.
They also may not accept any compensation, gratuity, or reward from
any other person who is beneficially interested in such a contract,
etc. While there are exceptions for certain higher education research
institutions, allowing certain researchers to have financial interests
in their institutional grants and contracts, those exceptions generally
do not apply to Green River.
Stated another way, a college employee, acting as such, cannot
participate in college transactions with an entity or other person
in which the employee holds some position or financial interest.
Again, there are some exceptions, for service on foundation boards
and in certain other public interest positions.
Confidential Information
Confidential information refers to specific information, rather
than generalized knowledge, that is not available to the general
public on request, and information that is made confidential by
law. College employees may not disclose confidential information
to any person who is not entitled or authorized to receive it.
No employee or officer of the college may participate in any
business or professional activity that she/he might reasonably expect
would require or cause unauthorized disclosure of confidential information
that had been obtained through the employee’s official position.
An employee also may not disclose or otherwise use such confidential
information for personal gain or benefit, unless the disclosure
has been properly authorized.
Finally, an employee may not intentionally conceal records that
(s) he knows are required to be released under the state public
records law.
Special Privileges
Except as required to perform employment duties, no employee or
officer of the college may use his/her position to secure special
privileges or exemptions for that employee, the employee's spouse,
children, or parents, or other persons.
Use of Public Resources for Political Campaigns
Employees and officers of the college are prohibited from using
college facilities to assist a political candidate’s election campaign
or to promote or oppose a ballot proposition.
The law broadly defines the term "facilities" to include, but
not be limited to, stationery, postage, machines, equipment, office space, vehicles, publications,
and the use of state employees during working hours, and clientele
lists of persons served by the agency. For example, the use of e-mail
to encourage letter-writing campaigns to promote candidates or a
ballot measure is prohibited.
An employee may also violate the ethics law if she/he lets someone
else use public resources for political campaigns.
An exception to this rule permits activities that are the normal
and regular conduct of a state agency, such as renting property
under customary rental arrangements or providing a college “neutral
forum” for political presentations.
2. COMPLAINT PROCESS
College employees may file complaints of alleged ethics violations
directly with the Washington State Executive Ethics Board.
Complaints must name a specific state officer or state employee
and the alleged conduct that could violate the state’s ethics law
if true. The Executive Ethics Board is required under law
to investigate any complaint that alleges conduct in violation of
RCW 42.52.
Complaints also may be filed internally, within the college,
following whatever complaint procedure or investigative process
applies to the state officer or state employee who is alleged to
have violated the ethics law.
3. PENALTIES
Employees violating this policy are subject to disciplinary action
as well as penalties imposed by the Executive Ethics Board under
WAC 42.52.520.
Specific Authority:
RCW 42.52
Law Implemented:
History of Policy or Procedure
Draft:
Adopted: April 9, 2008
Revised:
Reviewed by:
Contact: John Ramsey, Director of Public Information, ext. 3360
President’s Staff Sponsor: John Ramsey, Director of Public Information,
ext. 3360