mr. pilpel and say that i agree with him. the one thing that i think has to be a top-priority for you is enforcement. you can rearrange the rules and rewrite the rules and all this other stuff, but unless you enforce the rules, it's like rearrange deck chairs on the titanic. the city slowly sinks into the pay-for-play situation and everybody says let's rewrite the rules. but the bottom-line, if the rules aren't enforced, if they don't have some teeth, they are meaningless. and all of that effort was for naught. the civil grand jury talking about the ethics commission being the sleeping dog, aimed directly at that. i will give a personally example and i [tkpho-ep/] don't you don't want to hear it, city librarian herrera was accepting funds from the group of the friends of the san francisco library, a group he had fiduciary responsible towards keeping oversight as they raised money in the name of city government. he filed for three years stating he got nothing. we tried to approach this ethics commission with that and mr. saint