February 12, 2012

Ethics laws or ethics and laws

Some state lawmakers who will be working on ethics reform this year hear that laws and ethics are not the same.

Director Peggy Kerns of the Center for Ethics in Government says Ethics is a value system, not a series of laws. She says the bottom line of everybody’s ethical standards is based on obeying the laws. But she says there are plenty of gray areas where people have to tap into their personal value system to decide what to do.

But Kerns says it’s hard to be critical and judgmental about a person’s vote if it is rooted in who they are as a person.. She says legislators who have a well-thought out rationale for their decision might gain greater acceptance from a constituency that might otherwise be critical.

Kerns, who is a former Minority Leader in the Colorado house of Representatives, says ethics are like muscles that need to be exercised. She says people are automatically ethical but they have to practice being that. She says it takes courage…and repetition.

Hear Bob Priddy’s story:  :60  mp3  peggyva

Census officials reach out to “hard to count”

April 1st is the day Americans will be called on to count themselves in and the effort to inform us of the importance of filling out and returning the 2010 U.S. Census forms is already in full swing. But a greater effort has been launched to reach a group of people known as the “hard to count.”

The “hard to count” includes quite a list. [Read more...]

A Chat With Jack

Inside a small conference room at a Hannibal hotel, former Cardinal Jack cardinal caravan 2010 001Clark sits down to talk about what else, baseball. One of five Cardinal Caravans of current and former Redbirds made a stop Saturday afternoon in Hannibal. [Read more...]

Informal eco devo group looks at session and at future

An informal group of economic development advisors looks both to this legislative session and future sessions in an attempt to help Missouri stimulate job growth.

House Speaker Ron Richard (R-Joplin) says he has listened to this informal group for advice on economic development since the days when he chaired the House Economic Development Committee.

It is led by Cape Girardeau Chamber of Commerce President John Mehner, who endorses efforts this year to increase job training, focus on life sciences and cultivate growth among Missouri businesses. Those happen to be at the top of Governor Nixon and the legislature’s list.

The Missouri Science and Innovation Reinvestment Act was introduced in the House last session, but didn’t have enough time to get through the legislature. Nixon has touted the measure at various stops throughout the state. Nixon has also called for more emphasis on job training and has proposed Missouri First, a program that focuses on businesses already located in Missouri. It would provide incentives for them to expand and create jobs.

Mehner, also a member of the Missouri Development Finance Board, says Missouri must address the need to front-load business incentives.

“When companies are looking to locate to an area to establish a location or a site, they are looking for as much up-front, early-on money as possible to get things going or to satisfy their needs,” says Mehner.

Mehner suggests Missouri also needs a “deal closing fund” available in the crucial moments of negotiations with a company.

He understands it is hard, right now, for the state to secure a lot of cash.

“I think budget constraints have to be a parallel conversation with everything that we’re talking about,” according to Mehner.

Other areas of concern for the group include securing more capital investment and creating a framework for mega deals. Mehner says the group doesn’t have an answer for how the state can encourage the growth of small businesses, but understands the role they play in helping the economy grow out of recession.

Mehner says local and state officials also must be service oriented…even over-the-top in making Missouri an attractive state to do business.

 

Brent Martin reports [:60]

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