Founded in 1923, the Better Government Association is an independent, non-partisan government watchdog. Our mission is to combat waste, fraud, and corruption in government by conducting investigative research and litigation to expose problems; researching policy solutions promoting transparency and accountability in government; and using internship programs to train the next generation of investigators and public interest lawyers.
Join Our Mailing List

2008 BGA - Alper Integrity Index

Other States:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 27, 2008
CONTACT: (312) 427-8330
Jay Stewart, Executive Director
KANSAS #18 IN BGA-ALPER INTEGRITY INDEX

Today the Better Government Association (“BGA”) released the 2nd edition of the BGA-Alper Integrity Index.  The Index ranks all fifty states on the strength of their laws that relate to transparency, accountability and limits in government.

This edition of the BGA-Alper Integrity Index rates the fifty states on their performance across five different laws: open records laws; whistleblower laws; campaign finance laws; open meetings laws; and conflict of interest laws.  A full copy of the BGA-Alper Integrity Index is available for free on the BGA’s website at http://www.bettergov.org/.

“The BGA feels that these laws go to the core of responsive and ethical government.  Just as the fifty states compete to see which one is the most business friendly or has biggest population they should also compete to see who has the strictest laws in regard to governmental integrity” said BGA Executive Director Jay Stewart.

Kansas ranked 18th among all fifty states overall.  By issue area Kansas ranked 25st in open records laws; 4th in whistleblower laws; 26th in campaign finance laws; 40th in open meetings laws; and 8th in conflict of interest laws.  Despite its number 18 overall ranking, Kansas achieved a modest 56% overall score.

“Kansas should be congratulated that it beat out thirty-two other states” said Stewart, “however, there is clearly a lot of room for improvement.  If you look at the percentage score, Kansas received 56%, the equivalent of a F letter grade, hardly a cause for celebration.”

The 2nd edition of the BGA-Alper Integrity Index relies on data compiled through 2007.  Most of the data was collected by the BGA and the BGA created the scoring system for four of the five laws.  The BGA relied on the work of the Center for Public Integrity in regard to conflict of interest laws.

Generally the BGA reviewed the relevant laws in all fifty states and created a scoring system for each law that ran on a 0 to 2 scale with half point increments or a 0 to 4 scale on whole point increments.  The better the law the higher the score.  For the BGA better was usually defined as lower limits, more transparency and higher penalties.   The BGA scored areas of each type of law that were common across all fifty states.    

The BGA-Alper Integrity Index is the only tool that attempts to measure the performance of all fifty states across a number of good government laws.  As with any analytical tool, it can’t measure every variable that impact on government integrity.  However, laws are generally the reference point against which ethical behavior is measured.  By rating the quality of the laws we reviewed it at least gives an indication of how important ethics are to each state.

“We hope that legislators and leaders in Kansas will use the Integrity Index as a tool to spur reform and upgrade their laws in regard to transparency, accountability and limits.  Better yet, we hope Kansas comes up with a tough new standard that then becomes the measure against which other states will be judged” said Stewart.

###

The BGA-Alper Index was made possible in part by the generous support of Alper Services.
For more information about Alper Services please visit their website at www.AlperServices.com.


Integrity Index Home

News release

State Rankings

Download the Report - High Res PDF (3 MB)

Download the Report - Low Res PDF (1 MB)

Download the Report - Printable (PDF 1 MB)

Download the 2002 Integrity Index