
[T]he executive director of the State Ethics Commission told lawmakers Tuesday he worried fewer ethical complaints were being filed because the organization is viewed as โtoothless.โ
Larry Novins did not supply figures but said complaints this year were not on pace with 2018, the commissionโs first year, when 36 ethics complaints were filed involving statewide public officials, legislators, municipal employees and state employees.
As established, the ethics commission can only refer complaints to other agencies and has no investigatory or enforcement powers. Novins suggested part of the reason complaints were down this year could be because no action was taken on some cases that were referred to other agencies.

โIโm worried that weโre seen as toothless,โ Novins told members of the Senate Government Operations Committee. โPeople think Ethics Commission and they see this dorsal fin coming through the waters and I think at this point the way weโre set up weโre more of a toothless smaller fish.โ
The Senate committee is reviewing a bill that would expand the five-member commissionโs power and allow it to conduct investigations and levy penalties. The bill, S.157, is in many ways similar to the original ethics bill that lawmakers watered down before passing in 2017.
Novinโs concerns about the dropping number of complaints prompted Sen. Anthony Pollina, P/D-Washington, the original sponsor, to note โthe only thing worse than no ethics commission is having an ethics commission so weak that itโs irrelevant.โ
Sen. Jeanette White, D-Windham, chair of Senate Government Operations, acknowledged no action was likely this year and that the committee may have to extend its review of whether to expand the commissionโs powers until next year. She said more testimony would be taken since โwe donโt die in April.โ White acknowledged a public perception the commission was โweakโ and encouraged supporters of expanding powers to โshow us why we need this.โ
Meanwhile, the chair of the House committee looking at the ethics commission, signaled she wasnโt interested in expanding the commissionโs power until it becomes more established.
However, Rep. Sarah Copeland-Hanzas said her committee, House Government Operations, has shelved a bill that would have โclarifiedโ the role of the commission — a move some saw as weakening the commission and others saw as a rebuke of the commissionโs finding that Gov. Phil Scott was in violation of state ethics by having a continuing financial interest in a construction company that does business with the state.
The governor and others faulted the commission for making the opinion involving Scott โpolitical.โ The House bill would have made clear โadvisory opinionsโ were to be general guidance and not involve a specific person or complaint. The Vermont Public Interest Research Group had requested the advisory opinion on Scottโs business ties, which VPIRG dubbed a conflict of interest.

Copeland-Hanzas, D-Bradford, said Novins and the commissionโs new chair, Julie Hulburd, had assured the House committee that the commission had gone beyond its authority in the Scott decision. Hulburd replaced Madeline Motta, who defended the issuing of the advisory opinion before House Government Operations before she stepped down earlier this year after her election as an assistant judge. Novins confirmed to senators he and Hulburd had reassured the committee they understood its concerns about the commission going beyond its authority.
โWe thought weโd give them some time without being under the scrutiny of a moving bill,โ Copeland-Hanzas said.
She was hesitant to expand the commissionโs powers and worried about creating too big an entity.
โWe can give this some time to gel and hit its stride without throwing a lot of money at it,โ Copeland-Hanzas said Tuesday.
She added: โHow do we do it in a way thatโs Vermont-sized? We need to be aware that we donโt have millions of dollars to throw at an ethics commission and give them investigatory authority and staff and all of that,โ Copeland-Hanzas said. โWe have child care needs and weโve got health care needs of Vermonters and climate action we need to move forward on.โ


