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Who’s afraid of the inspector general? Peskin pushes anti-corruption reform measure

B.Hernandez1 hr ago

Supervisor Aaron Peskin gathered today for a press conference with several former government officials — former City Controller Ed Harrington, former Ethics Commissioner Paul Melbostad, and retired judge Ellen Chait — to discuss why San Francisco voters should vote for Proposition C, even though the San Francisco Democratic Central Committee is telling them not to.

Prop. C, a ballot measure authored by Peskin, would create a new position within the city: An inspector general with the power to investigate government and city contractor fraud, waste, abuse or misconduct.

"It's time we stop relying on the FBI to uncover systemic corruption and start cleaning up our own house," said Peskin, when he first introduced the measure to the Board back in May.

New corruption scandals about officials in and contractors doing business with San Francisco city government have been breaking at a regular clip for years now . Odds were high that a few more would break between May and the election, drumming up support both for the measure, and the guy who authored it.

New corruption scandals about officials in and contractors doing business with San Francisco city government have been breaking at a regular clip for years now . Odds were high that a few more would break between May and the election, drumming up support both for the measure, and the guy who authored it.

And lo it came to pass. Just this month, Sheryl Davis, director of the Human Rights Commission and long-time friend of Mayor London Breed resigned, after reporting showed she manipulated city spending reports and signed off on $1.5 million in contracts with a man with whom she shares a house. The city controller subsequently took control of the commission (more specifically, its accounting department).

And, as Peskin pointed out today, it can take a long time to get a city audit on suspected bad players.

"It took over a year from the time that I called for an audit of SF Safe in 2023, when the allegations of Kyra Worthy's crimes were made public," said Peskin, referring to the police department-adjacent nonprofit that was caught in a scandal short-changing its workers , landlord , and even a local florist , and whose director falsified invoices. "It then took another 196 days after the audit was released, before she was actually arrested. This is unacceptable. I believe that the mayor intentionally advocated her responsibility to root out corruption within her own administration and hold people accountable."

At the board level, Prop. C was wildly popular — Supervisors Ahsha Safai, Hillary Ronen, Dean Preston, Connie Chan, and Matt Dorsey all signed on as co-sponsors – and it was placed on the ballot by unanimous vote. Who would be willing to go on the record as opposed to fighting corruption?

As it turns out, a few people. The interlinked political pressure groups that have poured an unprecedented amount of money into the November election have come out swinging against it, among them GrowSF ("Purportedly designed to enhance efficiency and centralize investigations," the group's voter guide reads. "Prop C instead adds bureaucracy. This role would duplicate existing authority already held by the Ethics Commission, District Attorney, City Attorney, City Services Auditor, and the Sheriff's Office of Inspector General.") and TogetherSF Action ("This position consolidates far too much power in a single position." )

The San Francisco Democratic Party voted to oppose it — as of this March's election, a majority of the seats on the committee are occupied by members of the Democrats for Change slate , an oppositional slate that was elected largely with contributions from donors linked to groups like GrowSF and TogetherSF, and also endorsed by those groups.

The consolidation of power is the whole point of Prop. C, says Harrington, the city controller from 1991 to 2008. "The Ethics Commission is four years behind," he says, when presented with GrowSF's list of other groups that could conceivably be doing the work of an inspector general. "They will tell you that Mark Farrell shouldn't have done something next March." And that has been the case.

The Ethics Commission is also not equipped to audit anyone's finances, adds former Ethics Commissioner Paul Melbostad. Their primary role is to protect whistleblowers in city government, not audit entire city departments.

As for the district attorney's office, says Harrington, "They won't do something unless you bring it to them. You have to do the inspection work, bring them a package, and then they can decide to charge them. They don't just assign an inspector to go take a look. We had a big problem out on Treasure Island in 2007 and it took three years for the DA to bring charges."

As to the idea that the city attorney can fulfill the same role as an inspector general, adds Harrington, "as much as I love them, they're a political group."

Harrington has participated for years in discussions on how to create an inspector general position within city government. One of the reasons that it didn't come to pass were concerns that, if it were an elected position, it wouldn't actually do much good, since an elected inspector general might be wary of losing political support and endorsements. During his time as controller, says Harrington, he remembers two investigations under the city attorney's office that just stopped — in one case, a chief trial deputy was fired mid-investigation, and wound up getting a settlement for $2 million from the city after she sued for wrongful termination .

What finally persuaded Harrington that the creation of a relatively accountable-yet-independent inspector general was possible, he says, was the realization that it could fit into the city controller's office, which has a dedicated, independent budget that routinely closes out each year with a surplus of a few million dollars. The money was there. There was no need to try and create an entirely new department from scratch. Research into other inspector general roles in other cities carried out by Nate Horrell, one of Peskin's legislative aides, gave a sense of what best practices might look like.

The amount of money going into the November election makes the creation of an inspector general even more critical, says Jeremy Mack, executive director and treasurer of the Phoenix Project, an influence tracking group. When people are putting millions of dollars into an election, it's likely that they will be expecting something in return.

The focus of these big donations towards centralizing power in city government , the goal of TogetherSF's measure Proposition D, makes the prospect of continued corruption even more likely, said Mack. The TogetherSF measure has fundraised more money than any other item in the November election, at $7.8 million; Peskin's reform measures, meanwhile, have a meager $18,000 — 0.2 percent as much.

Most importantly, says Harrington, an inspector general with the powers laid out in Prop. C could stop corruption before it even happens so that a well-meaning project like the Dreamkeeper Initiative, which was also run by Davis, could continue to be recognized for what it was good at, instead of being enveloped in a cloud of scandal.

"At the Department of Human Rights, their budget went from $15 million to $45 million in less than two years. An inspector general could have said, 'Wait a minute. Do they have the capacity to triple their spending? Do they have controls in place to do that right?' You don't just want to catch people doing something wrong. You want to stop them from doing something wrong in the first place."

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