Many have listened to me talk about Trustee duties, standards, and responsibilities. Our wildlife Commissioners are some of our most important Trustees. One of the top standards by which a Trustee must adhere to is independence/impartiality/unconflicted if they are to fulfill their duty owed to Beneficiaries (citizens).
We see a rapidly changing trend of politicians using our wildlife appointments as more and more a political repayment process. It is a trend in every state. As such, the concern about who conflicted that appointee will be gets disregarded. As more of these conflicted Trustees get appointed, the appearance of conflicts arise, as do the actual number conflicts themselves.
A Trustee must act on behalf of all Beneficiaries equally, giving no preference to one group of class of beneficiaries. That is so paramount to Trusteeship that most states have passed statutes on such and court cases are littered with the judiciary holding Trustees to that requirement.
In this week's episode of Fresh Tracks Weekly, Marcus and I tackle that topic. Lots to think about. You are a beneficiary in your state's Public Trust of wildlife. Are your Trustees conflicted, either in appearance or in fact (many are)? If so, you might want to remind them of these Trustee requirements.
We see a rapidly changing trend of politicians using our wildlife appointments as more and more a political repayment process. It is a trend in every state. As such, the concern about who conflicted that appointee will be gets disregarded. As more of these conflicted Trustees get appointed, the appearance of conflicts arise, as do the actual number conflicts themselves.
A Trustee must act on behalf of all Beneficiaries equally, giving no preference to one group of class of beneficiaries. That is so paramount to Trusteeship that most states have passed statutes on such and court cases are littered with the judiciary holding Trustees to that requirement.
In this week's episode of Fresh Tracks Weekly, Marcus and I tackle that topic. Lots to think about. You are a beneficiary in your state's Public Trust of wildlife. Are your Trustees conflicted, either in appearance or in fact (many are)? If so, you might want to remind them of these Trustee requirements.