760 CMR, § 4.03

Current through Register 1536, December 6, 2024
Section 4.03 - Code of Conduct
(1)Standards in M.G.L. c. 268A.
(a)Applicability to LHA. M.G.L. c. 268A specifies standards of conduct for all Massachusetts public officials and employees. Board members, employees, and professional consultants employed by LHAs are considered to be public officials or employees subject to these standards.
(b)Prohibitions. M.G.L. c. 268A prohibits improper conduct by public officials and employees. The statute also prohibits conduct which appears to be improper. An LHA board member or employee cannot have a financial interest in contracts with the LHA. An LHA board member or employee cannot accept gifts to influence a decision, and he or she cannot accept compensation, other than that paid by the LHA, in connection with any matter in which the LHA has an interest. The statute contains other standards of conduct that apply to board members and employees. When questions arise as to whether certain conduct may be improper under the statute, the affected person should consult the State Ethics Commission.
(2)Specific Standards Affecting Board Members and Employees. The following specific restrictions shall apply to LHA board members and employees:
(a)Ineligibility of Certain officials to be State-appointed Board Members. An elected or appointed official of a state, county or municipal government, other than a town meeting member, who is in a policy making position as determined by the Department, shall not be eligible for appointment as the state-appointed board member of an LHA. This restriction shall not prohibit reappointment of a currently serving state-appointed board member.
(b)Ineligibility of LHA Board Members for Employment. An LHA board member shall not be eligible for any paid position, including temporary or contract work, with the LHA during his or her service as a board member or for a period of one year following the end of such service.
(c)Ineligibility of Certain LHA Employees for Employment as Clerk of the Works. An LHA executive director, assistant executive director, or director of maintenance or modernization shall not be eligible to serve as clerk of the works on any development or modernization project of the LHA for a period of one year following termination of his or her employment with the LHA.
(d)Ineligibility of Family Members for Employment. No member of the immediate family of an LHA board member or of an administrative or supervisory employee shall be eligible for employment in any capacity at the LHA without the prior written approval of the Department. The Department may in its discretion approve employment of such immediate family member provided that there has been compliance with all pertinent hiring standards and procedures, the individual is qualified for the position, and the appointment has not been influenced by any consideration other than merit.
(e)Restrictions on Supervision by Family Members. No LHA employee shall hold a position in which he or she directly or indirectly would supervise a member of his or her immediate family.
(f)Restrictions on Purchases of Goods or Services. No LHA shall contract with or purchase goods or services from an LHA board member, employee, or member of the immediate family of such board member or employee, or from any closely held entity in which an LHA board member, an employee, or a member of the immediate family of such board member or employee holds any capital stock or has any beneficial interest.
(g)Admission or Transfer of an LHA Board Member, Employee, or Family Member as a Tenant. Whenever any LHA board member, any administrative or supervisory employee or any member of the immediate family of such a board member or employee seeks admission as a tenant or seeks admission as a participant in a program administered by the LHA or seeks a transfer to a different unit, all necessary information shall be forwarded to the Department, which shall make the decision on the requested admission or transfer in accordance with applicable procedures.
(h)Restrictions on Rental Assistance to LHA Board Members, Employees, and Family Members. No rental assistance shall be paid for any unit owned in whole or in part by an LHA board member, executive director, rental assistance director, any other employee of an LHA (if such person is an employee in the same municipality as the unit), or a member of any such person's immediate family under any state-funded rental assistance program without the prior written opinion of the State Ethics Commission that such payment would not be improper. The LHA shall forward a copy of the opinion to the Department.
(i)Prevention of Personal Use of LHA Property. No LHA board member or employee shall make personal use of or permit any other person to make personal use of any property belonging to the LHA. The property belonging to the LHA shall be used in furtherance of the LHA's purposes. 760 CMR 4.03(2)(i) shall not be construed to limit the LHA from allowing LTOs, non-profit neighborhood or community groups, or public service organizations to use the property of the LHA for proper purposes benefitting the LHA or its tenants.
(j)Restrictions on Gifts or Compensation. No LHA board member or employee or any member of his or her immediate family (whether on his or her own behalf or on behalf of another person or entity) shall request, solicit, receive, or accept any cash, gift or compensation in any amount from any LHA tenant or any person or other entity who or which does or may reasonably be expected to do business with the LHA. No LHA employee may receive compensation (other than from the LHA) for goods or services provided to a tenant whether or not such goods or services are provided during working hours or on LHA property.
(k)Restrictions on Political Activity. In addition to any restrictions on political activity imposed by federal law, no LHA board member or employee shall solicit or receive campaign contributions, or conduct political activities during work hours, on LHA property or by use of LHA resources, or shall improperly use his or her official position to coerce or influence others in political campaigns.
(l)Preferential Treatment on Account of Board Membership. No family member, friend, business associate, employer, or potential employer or any like person shall be given any preferential treatment by the LHA because of his or her relationship with the board member. A tenant, who is a board member, shall receive no preferential treatment in housing or services because of his or her board membership.
(m)Limitations on a Board Member Who is an Officer of an LTO. A board member who is an officer in a local tenants' organization (LTO) (or other local tenants' association) shall not act on behalf of the LTO (or other tenants' association) before the LHA. An officer of an LTO (or tenants' association) who is a board member shall not contact the LHA or appear at any LHA meeting on behalf of the LTO (or other such association), and he or she shall not participate as a board member in any matter directly involving the LTO (or other tenants' association) in which he or she is an officer. No LTO (or other tenants' association) shall be given preferential treatment because an officer of the organization is a board member or a member of the family of a board member.
(3)Waiver of Restriction for Good Cause. The Department may in its discretion waive one or more of the restrictions in 760 CMR 4.03(2) in a particular situation where there is a good cause for the waiver and the conduct is not otherwise prohibited.
(4)Tenant Board Members. The following restrictions shall apply to tenants who are board members of an LHA:
(a)Laws Restricting Certain Actions. In recognition of the value of a tenant on the board of an LHA, M.G.L. c. 121B, § 5 requires that one of the four locally appointed board members in a city must be a tenant in the LHA's housing and M.G.L. c. 121B, § 5A requires that one of the four locally appointed or elected board members in a town must be a Tenant in the LHA's housing. The only restriction imposed by the Legislature in M.G.L. c. 121B on participation by a tenant board member in the LHA's business is that he or she may not participate in any decision which affects his or her "personal interest". The board members of an LHA are considered special municipal employees. The Commonwealth's Ethics Law, in M.G.L. c. 268A, § 19 prohibits a special municipal employee from participating in his or her job capacity in any matter in which the employee (or a family member, a business in which he or she holds an office or is employed, or a potential employer with which he or she is negotiating) has a "financial interest". Thus, a tenant board member under the Ethics Law must avoid participating in decisions which affect his or her "financial interest" (the Ethics Commission requires such an interest either to be "direct" or "reasonably foreseeable") and under M.G.L. c. 121B must avoid participating in decisions which affect his "personal interest". These two statutory requirements should be construed in harmony with each other in determining whether a tenant board member may participate in making a decision. The Ethics Law should not be read to prevent full and effective participation of a tenant member on an LHA board so long as he or she does not use his or her position to derive some direct personal benefit, financial or otherwise, to the board member (or to a family member or to a business or potential employer described in 760 CMR 4.04(2)) .
(b)Determination of When Not to Participate. The determination (whether a decision would have a direct or other reasonably foreseeable effect on a personal interest) is one which the tenant board member must make initially. He or she should look to see whether the decision would result in some actual benefit to himself or herself (or a family member or a business or potential employer described in 760 CMR 4.04(2)) . A benefit is something of more than minimal value which the board member (or family member or business or potential employer described in 760 CMR 4.04(2)) might receive depending on the board's vote. In the event that a vote could result in such a benefit to the board member (or family member or business or potential employer described in 760 CMR 4.04(2)) , he or she should not participate in making the decision, unless the matter is one of general application to all tenants in a housing program. The question, whether a decision could be considered to have such a direct benefit, may be difficult for a board member to make under certain circumstances. In such a case the member should request advice from the Ethics Commission, which has established procedures for giving both formal and informal advice.
(c)Examples of When a Tenant Board Member May or May Not Participate. A tenant board member shall not participate in discussions or votes regarding any matters which will affect his or her tenancy or housing unit exclusively, or which will benefit a number of tenancies or housing units, including the tenant member's unit, but exclude other similar tenancies or housing units. For example, a member shall not participate in a discussion or vote to provide new appliances to a number of selected units, including the member's own unit and excluding other units which also need new appliances. A tenant member may participate in a discussion or vote on policy matters if they will apply to all tenants in the same housing program equally, such as lease provisions, rules and procedures, but should not participate in a discussion or vote on policy matters which will confer a benefit on himself or herself (or a family member or to a business or potential employer described above) to the exclusion of other potentially eligible tenants.

760 CMR, § 4.03

Amended by Mass Register Issue 1336, eff. 4/7/2017.
Amended by Mass Register Issue 1342, eff. 4/7/2017.