Friday, March 27, 2026

House Ethics Panel Holds Rare Public Hearing on Democrat’s Conduct. (Annie Karnie, NY Times, March 26, 2026)

From The New York Times: 

House Ethics Panel Holds Rare Public Hearing on Democrat’s Conduct

Representative Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick of Florida is charged with stealing $5 million in FEMA money for her campaign.


Representative Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick, wearing a gray suit and a colorful brooch in the shape of a bird.
Representative Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick on Thursday. Her hearing was the first time in 16 years that the typically secretive House Ethics Committee had held a public hearing regarding the actions of a sitting lawmaker.Credit...Kenny Holston/The New York Times

The House Ethics Committee on Thursday opened a rare public hearing into the conduct of a Democratic congresswoman accused of embezzling federal disaster money to support her congressional campaign, turning back her effort to delay the proceedings until her criminal case was resolved.

The ethics trial of Representative Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick, a Florida Democrat charged with stealing $5 million in Federal Emergency Management Agency money for her campaign, was the first time in 16 years that the typically secretive panel had held a public hearing regarding the actions of a sitting lawmaker.

Ms. Cherfilus-McCormick’s attorney, William Barzee, argued that his client was “absolutely innocent,” and that the public congressional proceedings would taint her ability to have a fair criminal trial to consider her pending federal criminal indictment.

“You’re going to have members of the public who are also potential jurors in a criminal matter hearing about facts they otherwise would never be exposed to,” Mr. Barzee said. “That’s a major, major risk.”

“We’re not trying to run out the clock,” he added while asking to delay the proceedings for at least a few months. “We want this matter resolved.”

But the adjudicatory panel, which included a bipartisan group of eight House lawmakers, rejected her motion to delay the trial, instead kicking off a lengthy motion for summary judgment that will jump-start a process that is likely to lead in the coming weeks to the entire House considering Ms. Cherfilus-McCormick’s case in a vote on the floor.

The last such trial was in 2010, when the Ethics Committee found Representative Charles B. Rangel, Democrat of New York, guilty of 11 violations. The vote to hold a public hearing in this case was bipartisan and unanimous.

“Hearings are very rare,” said Representative Mark DeSaulnier of California, the ranking Democrat on the committee. He noted that the proceedings followed a yearslong, bipartisan investigation that included interviews with 23 witnesses and a review of hundreds of thousands of pages of documents.

“The allegations before us are extremely serious,” he said. “They also implicate the public’s confidence in the House’s integrity as an institution.”

He added: “The American people deserve for their institutions to uphold those standards.”

Throughout the proceedings, Ms. Cherfilus-McCormick sat silently, occasionally jotting down a note for her lawyer, while he mounted a long argument for why the panel should not proceed. She declined to speak to reporters during an extended break in the middle of the hearing.

Sitting in the audience was Elijah Manley, Ms. Cherfilus-McCormick’s primary opponent.

“It’s important for the district to have some eyes into this process,” he said. “We had high hopes for her; we’re disappointed.”

There were also some signs in the audience of what appeared to be quiet support for the congresswoman. Representative Jasmine Crockett, Democrat of Texas and a fellow member of the Congressional Black Caucus, sat through the first half of the hearing, even though she is not a member of the committee.

“It’s an open hearing,” she said as she left, declining to say more about why she had decided to attend.

The House Ethics Committee typically operates in deep secrecy, often remaining opaque about the timeline of its investigations into lawmakers and sometimes even keeping its findings confidential. The committee, for instance, released only its final report into former Representative Matt Gaetz, Republican of Florida — finding that he engaged in sexual misconduct, illicit drug use and accepted improper gifts — after a contentious debate over whether its conclusions should be made public at all.

The panel also typically defers to law enforcement on penalties, issuing fines or rebukes and only rarely recommending that a lawmaker be removed from office. In the case of the fabulist and former Representative George Santos, Republican of New York, for instance, the ethics panel stopped short of calling for his expulsion from Congress, even as he faced a 23-count federal indictment. (He was ultimately expelled.)

The Justice Department in November charged Ms. Cherfilus-McCormick with stealing the FEMA funds. She has denied any wrongdoing. If convicted, Ms. Cherfilus-McCormick could face up to 53 years in prison.

Annie Karni is a congressional correspondent for The Times.





MEDICAL MALPRACTICE?: Report concerns to Joint Commission on Accreditation of Health Care Organizations!

Blow the whistle.  Speak out.  Save lives and tax money.  Report your concerns to Joint Commission on Accreditation of Health Care Organizations! 

https://www.jointcommission.org/en-us/contact-us/report-a-patient-safety-event



Former JEA exec: Water fees have been an issue for years. (Mike Mendenhall, Jacksonville Today, March 26, 2026)

Fun fact: Regina Ross was an able Assistant County Attorney for St. Johns County and did excellent work. When maladroit corporate lawyer and SJC County Attorney RICHARD CHRISTIAN KOMANDO leaves,  we need a proper search for County Attorney.

From Jacksonville Today:

Former JEA exec: Water fees have been an issue for years



former JEA Chief of Staff Kurt Wilson at City Hall
Former JEA Chief of Staff Kurt Wilson testifies in front of the Jacksonville City Council's Special Investigatory Committee on JEA on March 23, 2026. | Mike Mendenhall, Jacksonville Today

Former JEA exec: Water fees have been an issue for years

Published on March 23, 2026 at 10:02 pm
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JEA’s former chief of staff says the public utility’s management has been trying for years to resolve its lax policy that’s caused the under collection of what are called capacity fees from several commercial water customers for decades. 

Kurt Wilson, whose position was eliminated in February by JEA CEO Vickie Cavey, testified under oath Monday during a hearing in front of the Jacksonville City Council’s Special Investigatory Committee on JEA.

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In addition to Wilson’s testimony on the fees, the committee’s questions also zeroed in on Wilson’s dismissal from JEA, his allegation that Cavey created a toxic work environment for some on her senior leadership team, and Wilson’s involvement in awarding a lobbying contract to Ballard Partners, which employs former Mayor Lenny Curry.

The scope of the newly created committee — chaired by Ron Salem, with council members Rory Diamond and Ju’Coby Pittman — has been criticized by others on the council and by Mayor Donna Deegan’s administration as overreach.

According to Wilson, JEA’s senior staff became aware of the lax capacity fee policy in 2022, during the tenure of former CEO Jay Stowe.

He said a customer’s development project triggered an audit, which found multiple companies within JEA’s service area were building and expanding but not reporting it to JEA and therefore not paying additional capacity fees. 

By 2025, the problem was raised to the level of the CEO and other senior management, Wilson said.

One example referenced in the investigation is Mayo Clinic’s water usage. 

A December 2024 memo from JEA’s then-chief legal counsel, Regina Ross, to Mayo Clinic’s attorneys says the hospital could owe $18.9 million in water and wastewater capacity fees. That was based on how much more water Mayo has consumed due to its growth since 1995.

In a contentious meeting last week, city General Counsel Michael Fackler said Ross — who’s now an attorney for the city — would not be made available to auditors due to her attorney-client privilege with JEA. 

Mayo Clinic claims it’s exempt from paying for the additional water and wastewater usage based on an agreement with the city dating back to 1986.

Wilson said one issue is when a growing or expanding company applies for a permit with JEA’s electric business, there is no coordination with the water and wastewater services to verify if the company needs to report additional capacity.

“There’s no flag in there. Ask key account people, they don’t know. If you’re not driving past these businesses on a daily (basis) and your mind’s not thinking, ‘This place has really grown in the last 20 years. I wonder if they’ve ever paid’ — I’m not putting this on people (or a) person; the system’s broken on JEA’s side,” Wilson told the committee.

He said instead of filing a lawsuit or going to mediation, which he and Cavey agreed would have been “bad optics” because the oversight was JEA’s error, Cavey came to an agreement with Mayo: JEA would waive the previously unpaid fees and Mayo would pay the full amount moving forward. According to Wilson, there was some question as to whether the CEO had the authority to waive the fees unilaterally or if that needed board approval.

It never came to the board.

“Forty percent of our customers right now struggle to pay our bills. So whatever the business is — there’s plenty of them out there — but the reality is, if they’re not paying the capacity somebody else is,” Wilson said.

Wilson highlight the pushback JEA received from developers in 2021 when its board approved a 149% increase on the one-time water and sewer fees for new housing and commercial development — the first increase in more than 15 years. 

JEA is required to collect capacity fees under Florida law, and it says the fees repay bonds it uses to borrow money to build water plants and infrastructure. 

Wilson said he didn’t see any evidence JEA was trying to cover up the uncollected capacity fees.

“I do think (the fees are) the 800-pound gorilla that makes me the most nervous,” council member Diamond said. “And hopefully it’s just something that they can get worked out and JEA goes along in a good way.”

Who owes capacity fees?  

There are still questions about how many and which organizations could have unpaid and unreported water capacity increases. 

Wilson told the committee he heard it’s anywhere between 12 and 20 companies. Salem previously said there could be more than $100 million in unpaid water capacity fees.

During the investigatory committee’s first meeting last week, Diamond named Florida State College at Jacksonville and the Jacksonville Zoo and Botanical Gardens as examples of organizations that could be on the list.

Salem said Monday that it would be unfair to single out Mayo Clinic. 

“We need to resolve this once and for all, and fairly to all parties involved,” Salem said.

A spreadsheet provided to the City Council Auditor by JEA and obtained by Jacksonville Today lists more than 40 organizations and their water/wastewater capacity increase. But the document is marked “Not accurate – Do not rely on.”

City Council Auditor Kim Taylor told the committee her office will be trying to independently confirm JEA’s capacity data through its own research.

She told Jacksonville Today in an email Monday that she doesn’t think the utility has an updated list.

“Part of the problem is knowing the initial starting benchmark for capacity, and that requires pulling very old records,” Taylor said.

Taylor stressed the capacity fee investigation will be time intensive, as the auditor, city attorney and JEA work to locate records dating back to the 1980s and ’90s, when the city controlled Duval County’s water service.

Former JEA Chief of Staff Kurt Wilson (foreground) testifies Monday in front of the Jacksonville City Council’s Special Investigatory Committee on JEA. | Mike Mendenhall, Jacksonville Today

Oversight or overreach? 

Not all council members are on board with getting involved in JEA’s internal personnel issues or investigating its handling of capacity fees. 

Council members Matt Carlucci, Jimmy Peluso and Michael Boylan — who led the effort to reform the JEA charter after the failed sale attempt — are calling out what they see as the committee’s slant. 

City Chief Administrative Officer Mike Weinstein, who’s worked under Republican and Democratic mayoral administrations, says the council’s move to influence JEA’s leadership makes him nervous.

“It’s not that JEA shouldn’t have oversight, but the oversight shouldn’t be people who are here for a few years trying to get a next position in politics. It should be done by professional organizations that are in the business, not people who don’t know anything about electricity and water,” Weinstein told Jacksonville Today. 

Council President Kevin Carrico, who formed the special committee to aid the city Office of Inspector General’s investigation into the fees and look into the allegations against Cavey, is asserting his authority to be a voting member. 

Carrico is himself the subject of a State Attorney’s Office subpoena, which appears to be looking into his attempt to appoint his boss, Boys & Girls Club Boys & Girls Club CEO Paul Martinez, to the JEA board. 

Weinstein previously served as chief financial officer in the John Delany and Curry administrations. He said he watched the attempt to sell JEA during Curry’s tenure, and said “legitimate” problems inside JEA should be looked at by professionals, “not politicians.” 

“I’m just nervous that again, here we are years later with local politicians exerting a tremendous amount of influence and power trying to take over management decisions of a very large business,” he said.


author imageAssociate Editor emailJacksonville Today Associate Editor Mike Mendenhall focuses on Jacksonville City Hall and the Florida Legislature. A native Iowan, he previously led the Des Moines Business Record newsroom and served as associate editor of government affairs at the Jacksonville Daily Record, where he twice won Florida Press Association TaxWatch Awards for his in-depth coverage of Jacksonville’s city budget. Mike’s work at the Daily Record also included reporting on Downtown development, JEA and the city’s independent authorities, and he was a frequent contributor to WJCT News 89.9 and News4Jax.