of Ethics Online Collection: None
AN INSTITUTE OF THE AMERICAN PLANNING ASSOCIATION
Ethics Advisories
The AICP Code of Ethics and Professional Conduct provides for advice
by the executive director on specific problems and questions concerning
ethical behavior by members. The AICP Ethics Committee asked that such
advice be codified as advisory rulings specified by the code.
Advisory Ruling No. 1: Sexual Harassment
Sexual harassment is unethical under the AICP Code of Ethics and Professional
Conduct. Sexual harassment is also subject to penalty under law. The U.S.
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission defines sexual harassment as:
"Unwelcome sexual advances, requests for sexual favors, and other
verbal or physical conduct of a sexual nature constitute sexual harassment
when:
1) Submission to such conduct is made either explicitly or implicitly a term or condition of an individual's employment;
2) Submission to or rejection of such conduct by an individual is used as the basis for employment decisions affecting such individual; or
3) Such conduct has the purpose or effect of unreasonably interfering
with an individual's work performance or creating an intimidating, hostile,
or offensive working environment."
Two of the general principles in the Code are applicable to specific instances
of harassment: Principle D
(1) of the Code says that a planner must not commit a deliberately wrongful act which reflects adversely on the planner's professional fitness; and Principle D
(2) of the Code says that a planner must respect the rights of others
and, in particular, must not improperly discriminate against persons.
Unlawful sexual harassment as defined by the EEOC is a deliberately wrongful
act.
Respecting the rights of others, under the Code, requires a standard of
behavior higher than that defined as coercive or intimidating by EEOC.
Conduct that may not have illegal effect may nevertheless be harassment.
joking or bantering about sexual subjects, comments suggesting sexual
attractiveness, and comments disparaging women or men or their abilities
generally may constitute petty harassment. If any such behavior is found
offensive, offended persons should so say. The offensive behavior becomes
harassment if continued after the offender is notified.
Negligence or omission on the part of an employer who is dismissive of
a complaint of sexual harassment, and encourages the complainant to be
tolerant of the offense is itself a form of harassment.So is a deliberately
false accusation of sexual harassment.
Harassment is decidedly distinct from behavior occasioned when a genuinely
mutual affection springs up between co-workers. (May 1988)
Advisory Ruling No. 2: Conflicts of Interest When a Public Planner
has a Stake in Private Development
The Code of Ethics and Professional Conduct addresses conflicts of interest
in Principle B (3): "A planner must not, without the consent of the
client or employer, and only after full disclosure, accept or continue
to perform work if there is an actual, apparent, or reasonably foreseeable
conflict between the interests of the client or employer and the personal
or financial interest of the planner or of another past or present client
or employer of the planner."
Conflicts of interest are reasonably foreseeable when a planner attempts
to serve a real estate development client while also serving a public
agency that may have a role in reviewing or approving projects of that
client.
Inquiries from planners who contemplate combining activity in the real
estate business with public planning work have fallen into a pattern as
have the responses:
Real estate is a popular investment, and planners, knowing a lot about
it, are attracted to it.
"I have an opportunity to invest in a small development, but the
proposal will come before my agency for approval. What do you advise?"
Don't do it. There are other investment opportunities.
"What if it's put in my wife's name?" Your wife's financial
interest is your financial interest and yours is hers.
"But, when it comes before us, I will exclude myself from the decision,
and only other staff members will recommend on the proposal. I won't take
part at all." Your colleagues work with you, know that your interests
are involved, and can't eliminate the influence of your relationship with
them, even if unexpressed.
"My influence really can be a positive one on the developer. I know
what would be good for the public and can work for a good design."
That's what your agency is there for, and that's why it has the power
to review and approve.
"But what if I disclose everything to the director, and he gives
his consent ... ?" He shouldn't. I certainly would advise him not
to.
1776 Massachusetts Ave. NW Washington, DC 20036 Phone 202.872.0611
"I will work for a broker in a neighboring jurisdiction across the
state line. He doesn't have a license in that state." No, but some
of his colleagues do. And some of the decisions affecting the broker's
business are regional decisions involving both jurisdictions.
A code of ethics should not be a what-can-l-get-away-with code. It should
not be tortured into loopholes and technicalities that would allow a person
to be formally correct while ethically wrong. The AICP Code looks for
"more than the minimum threshold of enforceable acceptability. It
sets aspirational standards that require conscious striving to attain."
Developers can benefit from professional planning services and are just
as entitled to fully conscientious advocacy of their interests as a public
planning agency. A conflict of interest is inherent, however, in any assumption
of both roles simultaneously.
There may also be a conflict when the roles overlap. A planner may move
from employment by a public agency to employment by a private client.
A conflict arises as soon as discussion is initiated for such a move.
The public employer must, therefore, be notified promptly that such discussion
has taken place whether or not it matures in a change of employment. This
is decidedly earlier notice than is normal for a job change and it is
notice of a change that may not take place. It is necessary, however,
to guard against the substantial conflicts that would occur if a planner
is in a position to influence the resolution of certain issues in public
employ that will later affect the interests of a new, private employer.
Private planners and consultants who undertake work for a public agency,
or change employment from private to public, must disclose any conflicts
or potential conflicts to the public agency employer. (May 1988)
Advisory Ruling No. 3: Outside Employment or Moonlighting
A planner's responsibility to an employer places significant restraints
on accepting work for employers outside of the full-time commitments to
the primary employer. A full-time member of a planning agency staff owes
loyalty, energy and powers of mind primarily to its service.
The Principles in the Code that concern conflict of interest [B(3)] and
using an office to seek special advantage [B(6)] must especially be applied.
A planning staff member must take no employment outside of official duties
unless such employment creates no conflict with those duties either in
the interests to be served or in competition for time and energy. If the
planner decides that there will be no such conflicts, then outside employment
must, in addition, receive the explicit approval of the employer.
No outside employment must be undertaken if its performance will reduce
the quality or dispatch with which the staff member executes primary responsibilities.
The number of hours and the scheduled times devoted to outside employment
must not interrupt or interfere with the time that the primary responsibilities
demand.
Outside employment must never deal with any matter that may require an
action or recommendation by the primary employing agency. Neither must
employment be taken with any person or organization that does business
with any agency of the primary employer.
Public property must not be used for any private purpose including work
that is performed for other employers.
Principle B (7) says that "A planner must not accept ... work beyond
the planner's professional competence or accept work which cannot be performed
with the promptness required. . . . " Since the schedules, deadlines,
priorities and unanticipated time demands of the primary employer must
always take precedence, the volume of outside work must necessarily be
small and an outside employer must be informed that prompt execution will
not necessarily be satisfied.
Both the planner requesting, and the authority giving, approval for outside
employment should consider the main justification for approval is a demand
for whatever special professional knowledge and experience the planner
has that is not
otherwise readily available. Service as a teacher or instructor is outside
employment that is most justifiable and an unspecialized, general consulting
practice least justifiable. (May 1988)
Advisory Ruling No. 4: Honesty in the Use of Information
As professional givers of advice-advice that may affect the well-being
of communities and individuals for many years-we have a special obligation
to cherish honesty in the information that supports our advice.
Yet, many daily pressures do battle against honesty. We are pressed to
be effective advocates for a community, a private client, an elected administration
or a cause. A political agenda is often formed before dispassionate study;
those who have campaigned for it then look with passion for studies to
support it. Decision-makers may demand a greater degree of certainty,
or impose more rigorous criteria for decision, than the capability of
analysis or sufficiency of data can satisfy.
The Code of Ethics and Professional Conduct is filled with prescriptions
for honesty:
A-3) "provide full, clear and accurate information on planning issues
to citizens and govenmental decision-makers."
B-3) "only after full disclosure" (on conflicts of interest)-,'
B-4) "must not ... through use of false or misleading claims."
B-7) "must not accept ... work beyond the planner's professional
competence."
C-1) "must protect and enhance the integrity of the profession."
C-2) "must accurately represent the qualifications, views and findings
of colleagues."
D-4) "must accurately represent [one's own] professional qualifications,
education and affiliations."
In some situations, planners must not provide full information. Planners
frequently have the role of negotiators whose effectiveness depends on
not disclosing final positions that are acceptable. And, as the Code points
out, "the need to provide full public information may compete with
the need to respect confidences." information that is disclosed in
such circumstances must, however, be honest and accurate.
It is part of professional conduct to communicate our ethical standards
to clients, employers and the public. Communicating them early, before
they need to be applied to a specific controversy, may case pressures
to abuse them.
There should be no need to explain what the code requires as full, clear
and accurate information. Half-truths, deceptions and undocumented assertions
don't pass. A half-truth is a whole lie. Don't cook the numbers.
There is also a positive duty on behalf of ethical treatment of information.
In reporting the results of studies, planners must follow the scholar's
rule of making it possible for others to follow in our footsteps and check
our work. Document the sources of data. Report the statistical procedures
used, what was done to bring the raw data into the form that is reported.
What assumptions were made at different stages in the study?
Public decision-makers must often leap beyond the cautions and reservations
of a careful study to achieve political solutions. Planners must take
pains that our studies and recommendations are not wrongly interpreted,
and that a clear distinction is made between factual findings and policy
decisions. (March 1991)

