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Office
of the Provost
Faculty and Unclassified Staff Handbook Chapter 4 -- Faculty:
Benefits, Responsibilities, and Specific Requirements
Gifts and Hospitality for Unclassified
State Staff
Policy
The Kansas Commission on Governmental Standards and
Conduct has issued rules and regulations and advisory opinions interpreting
the gift statute. These can be viewed at www.accesskansas.org/ethics.
The Kansas Commission on Governmental Standards and
Conduct issues advisory opinions upon its own initiative and upon
the request of any person to whom the state law applies. Advisory
opinions serve to interpret the law and may be especially useful
to public servants who are considering an activity which they suspect
may involve a conflict of interests. Any person who acts in accordance
with the provisions of such an opinion shall be presumed to have
complied with the provisions of the conflict of interests law. If
the employee receives an offer of a gift which the employee is not
sure whether to accept, the employee should consult with the supervisor
or the Kansas Commission on Governmental Standards and Conduct to
determine whether it is permissible to accept it.
NOTE: These provisions do not apply for an unclassified
state employee whose salary is subject to the Governor’s approval.
Kansas Commission on Governmental Standards and Conduct
(07-01-02).
Complimentary Copies
1. Is it a violation for you to keep copies of books
sent to you by publishers who want you to then order the books for
your classroom?
2. Is it a violation for you to receive a free desk
copy of newspapers and books used in your classroom?
Because you are in the unclassified service and your
salary is not subject to direct approval by the Governor, K.S.A.
46-237, rather than Section 4 of HB 2064 found in Chapter 155 of
the 1997 Session Laws of Kansas, applies to your questions. K.S.A.
46-237(a) in pertinent part states:
(a) No state officer or employee . . . shall accept,
or agree to accept any economic opportunity, gift, loan, gratuity,
special discount, favor, hospitality, or service having an aggregate
value of $40 or more in any calendar year from any one person known
to have a special interest, under circumstances where such person
knows or should know that a major purpose of the donor is to influence
such person in the performance of their official duties or prospective
official duties.
K.S.A. 46-237(c) states:
(c) No person licensed, inspected or regulated by a state agency
shall offer, pay, give or make any economic opportunity, gift, loan,
gratuity, special discount, favor, hospitality, or service having
an aggregate value of $40 or more in any calendar year to such agency
or any state officer or employee, candidate for state office or
state officer elect of that agency.
In applying this language to your questions,
since you make the decisions on which textbooks are to be used in
your classroom, each publisher would have a "special interest"
in you. In addition, the books and newspapers are being provided
to you in order to influence you in the performance of your official
duties in selecting books and newspapers. Therefore, you could not
accept these items as your personal property. However, since your
university does not license, inspect or regulate the publishers,
you could accept the items on behalf of the state and have them
become state property.
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