The following policies and principles are intended to cover
all aspects of the small cities program, whether specifically cited
or otherwise.
A. Goods and services shall be procured in a manner that maximizes free
and open competition whenever possible in accordance with Town of
Raymond Bidding Guidelines adopted on August 14, 1989.
B. Every effort will be made to actively recruit woman- and minority-owned
business and to provide opportunities for local residents and businesses,
consistent with Section 3 of the Housing and Urban Development Act
of 1968.
C. All procurement actions shall be conducted in public whenever of
substantial interest, and all records related thereto will be open
to public review.
The proper operation of democratic government requires that
public servants be independent, impartial, and responsible to the
people; that government decisions and policy be made through the proper
channels of governmental structure; that public office not be used
for personal gain; and that the public have confidence in the integrity
of its government members to perform their duties without conflicts
between their private interests and those of the citizens they serve.
In recognition of these goals, a Code of Ethics for all public servants
is adopted in accordance with RSA 31:39A.
The Code of Ethics covers conflicts of interest; a duty to disclose
and a duty to recuse; unfair personal use of Town property; misuse
of confidential information; gifts and favors; a duty to cooperate;
and fair dealing/nondiscrimination.
As used in this chapter, the following terms shall have the
meanings indicated:
BOARD
Any board, committee, or commission, permanent or special,
appointed or elected.
COMPLAINANT
A person who has submitted a petition to the Ethics Committee
requesting an inquiry or alleging a violation of the Code of Ethics.
CONFLICT OF INTEREST
A situation, circumstance, or financial interest that has
the potential to cause a private or personal interest to interfere
with the proper exercise of a public duty.
EMPLOYEE
A person who is paid by the Town of Raymond for his/her services,
but who is not an independent contractor.
FAMILY
Any person who is related to the public servant in one of
the following ways: spouse, domestic partner, parent, grandparent,
child, grandchild, sibling, or similar relation to the individual's
spouse. This includes all persons who are members of the same household
as the public servant in question, regardless of whether they are
related by blood or marriage.
FIRM
A sole proprietorship, joint venture, partnership, corporation
and any other form of enterprise, but shall not include a public benefit
corporation, local or economic development corporation or other similar
entity as defined by the Ethics Committee.
INTEREST
Any legal, financial or equitable right, share, or claim,
whether or not subject to an encumbrance or a condition, which is
owned or held, in whole or in part, jointly or severally, including
but without limitation a right, share or claim to land.
[Amended 3-10-2009 ATM
by Art. 24]
PECUNIARY
Any advantage in the form of money, property, commercial
interest or anything else, the primary significance of which is economic
gain; it does not include economic advantage applicable to the public
generally, such as tax reduction, or increased prosperity generally.
PRINCIPALS
Those people who are the subject of the action or application
that is before the board.
PUBLIC SERVANT
All officials, officers and employees of the Town, whether
elected, appointed, paid or unpaid. A person is considered a public
servant upon her or his election, appointment or other designation
as such, although s/he may not yet officially occupy that position.
QUASI-JUDICIAL ACTION
Any action where the board or committee members are acting
like a judge or a jury. For example, when a board or committee has
a duty to notify the potential parties, hear the parties, and can
only decide on the matter after weighing and considering such evidence
and arguments as the parties choose to lay before the board, the members
are involved in a quasi-judicial action. The work of the Planning
and Zoning Boards is largely quasi-judicial.
RECUSE
Removing or excusing oneself from participating in a specific
action or discussion due to a conflict of interest. Recusal means
to remove oneself completely from all further participation as a public
servant in the matter in question.
RESPONDENT
A public servant named in a petition submitted to the Ethics
Committee as an inquiry or alleging a violation of the Code of Ethics.
RESIDENT
A resident of the Town of Raymond.
TOWN
The Town of Raymond, including all of its departments, boards,
commissions, and committees.
Individuals covered. This Code of Ethics shall pertain to public
servants.
A. Conflicts of interest.
(1) Public servants shall avoid conflicts of interest or even the appearance
of a conflict of interest.
(2) Public servants shall not appear on behalf of a client, friend, or
family member before any governmental body of which the public servant
is a member or whose members have been appointed by the governmental
body of which the public servant is a member.
(3) Public servants shall not participate in any matter in which s/he,
or a member of her or his family, have a personal interest that may
directly or indirectly affect or influence the performance of her
or his duties. In such instances, the public servant shall recuse
herself or himself from discussion and decisionmaking.
(4) No public servant shall engage in any business, transaction or private
employment, or have any financial or other private interest, direct
or indirect, which is in conflict with the proper discharge of his
or her official duties.
(5) No public servant shall use or attempt to use his or her position
as a public servant to obtain any financial gain, contract, license,
privilege or other private or personal advantage, direct or indirect,
for the public servant or any person or firm associated with the public
servant.
(6) No public servant shall give opinion evidence as a paid expert against
the interests of the Town in any civil litigation brought by or against
the Town.
(7) No public servant shall:
(a)
Coerce or attempt to coerce, by intimidation, threats or otherwise,
any public servant to engage in political activities;
(b)
Request any subordinate public servant to participate in a political
campaign. For purposes of this section, participation in a political
campaign shall include managing or aiding in the management of a campaign,
soliciting votes or canvassing voters for a particular candidate or
performing any similar acts which are unrelated to the public servant's
duties or responsibilities. Nothing contained herein shall prohibit
a public servant from requesting a subordinate public servant to speak
on behalf of a candidate or provide information or perform other similar
acts, if such acts are related to matters within the public servant's
duties or responsibilities;
(c)
Misuse his or her official authority or influence for the purpose
of interfering with or affecting the result of an election;
(d)
Directly or indirectly, coerce, command, or advise a state or
local officer or employee to pay, lend, or contribute anything of
value to a party, committee, organization, agency, or person for political
purposes; or
(e)
Become a candidate for public office in a partisan election
as proscribed under the Hatch Act.
(8) No public servant shall receive compensation except from the Town
for performing any official duty.
(9) No public servant shall enter into any business or financial relationship
with another public servant who is a superior or subordinate of such
public servant.
B. A duty to disclose and a duty to recuse.
(1) Duty to disclose.
(a)
Public servants shall not participate in the conduct of business
on behalf of the Town or enter into discussion or deliberation of
any matter without first, publicly and on the record, stating all
dealings; interests; relationships; friendships; employer/employee
relationships and possible conflicts which may exist between you and
your family and the principals or the issue under consideration.
(b)
Individuals in an employment relationship with a public servant
may appear on behalf of clients, friends, or family before the governmental
body of which that public servant is a member if, and only if, the
public servant publicly discloses such affiliation and recuses himself
or herself from participation in the matter.
(c)
Individuals in an employment relationship with a public servant
may appear on behalf of clients, friends, or family before any governmental
body whose members have been appointed by the body of which that public
servant is a member if, and only if, such appointing public servant
publicly discloses such affiliation in writing to that board in advance
of the meeting.
(2) Duty to recuse. Public servants have a duty to recuse themselves
from participating in specific action or discussion due to a conflict
of interest.
(a)
Public servants who have been recused may remain in the hearing
room for the hearing and shall seat themselves with the other members
of the public who are present. When recused, the recused person shall
not participate in further discussions, unless s/he clearly states
for the record that s/he is doing so only as a general member of the
public. The recused person shall not be present in the hearing room
once the public input portion of the meeting is closed and the deliberation
and voting process begins.
[Amended 3-13-2018 ATM
by Art. 23]
(b)
Except as otherwise provided by state law, in the event a board
member feels that a member has a conflict of interest, the board may
take a nonbinding vote to request recusal by that member. Such action
may only be initiated by a member of the sitting board.
(c)
Not only does a public servant have a duty to recuse himself
or herself as outlined in the section above, a public servant must
recuse himself or herself in a quasi-judicial action if he or she
would not be qualified to sit as a juror in that case. For example,
jurors are not qualified to sit in a case if they have advised or
assisted either party in a matter being decided, are prejudiced to
any degree regarding the pending matter, or believe they cannot for
any reason be totally fair and impartial. As a representative of the
Town of Raymond, you are expected to hold yourself to this same standard.
C. Unfair personal use of Town property. No public servant shall use
Town property, services, or labor personally, or make the same available
to others, unless such use is available to other residents upon request
on equal terms.
D. Misuse of confidential information. No public servant shall disclose
any confidential information which is obtained as a result of the
official duties of such public servant and which is not otherwise
available to the public or use any such information to advance any
direct or indirect financial or other private interest of the public
servant or of any other person or firm associated within the public
servant; provided, however, that this shall not prohibit any public
servant from exercising his or her rights under the applicable State
or Federal Whistle Blower's Protection Act or as otherwise required
by law.
E. Gifts and favors. No public servant shall accept or agree to accept
any pecuniary gift from any person or firm unless it is a nonmonetary
gift of nominal value and only if said person or firm is not or is
not likely to become subject to or interested in any matter or action
pending before or contemplated by himself or the Town. The Ethics
Committee shall annually establish the upper limit on "nominal value."
F. A duty to cooperate. All public servants shall cooperate fully with
the Ethics Committee regarding any complaint or inquiry alleging violation
of this Code of Ethics.
G. Fair dealing/nondiscrimination.
(1) Each public servant should endeavor to deal fairly with members of
the public, suppliers and fellow public servants and may not be influenced
by such person's work for or gifts made to the Town. None should
take unfair advantage of anyone through manipulation, concealment,
abuse of privileged information, misrepresentation of material facts,
or any other unfair-dealing practice.
(2) Public servants shall in the course of their public duties afford
equal opportunity to everyone, regardless of age, sex, race, color,
marital status, physical or mental disability, religious creed, national
origin or sexual orientation.