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									 «  on: September 22, 2006, 11:32:06 PM »  | 
								
	 	 
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							New member says no clients bid for water district work
  By Andy Reid South Florida Sun-Sentinel
  September 9, 2006
  The newest board member of the South Florida Water Management District  emphasized her public position to try to drum up work for her private  business.
  Miya Burt-Stewart highlighted her March appointment by Gov. Jeb Bush to  the water district governing board in e-mail and other correspondence  that she said was sent to friends, colleagues and prospective clients.
  An e-mail about her Broward County-based consulting firm also listed  her water district cell phone as one of her contact numbers.
  According to company literature, the firm can help clients work with  "elected and regulatory officials" who "make decisions that could  jeopardize a company's competitiveness." It said the company can help clients  achieve "bottom-line and business objective without the hang-ups of  policy decisions being made in Washington D.C. or the state capital."
  Burt-Stewart said Friday her correspondence was not intended to infer  that she could help clients win favor with the water district, which has  a $1 billion budget and hires numerous contractors, consultants and  attorneys for water projects.
  She said her clients do not do business with the water district. She  said she inadvertently listed her water district cell phone number and  that she does not conduct private business on that phone.
  "You will never see that again," said Burt-Stewart, who added she  removed the district cell phone number from her company correspondence after  just one day.
  State law prohibits public officials from using their official position  to "secure a special privilege, benefit, or exemption for themselves or  another."
  Water district board members, who are unpaid and must be confirmed by  the state Legislature, are required to declare any potential conflicts  of interest and must abstain from votes that could benefit them or those  close to them.
  "I hope that she has reviewed all of the appropriate legislation [and]  governed herself accordingly," Kevin McCarty, chairman of the  nine-member water district board, said about Burt-Stewart. "I try to keep my  private business and my board business totally separate. It really is not  that hard."
  Burt-Stewart's "Dear Colleague" correspondence says she was "recently  appointed by Florida's Governor Jeb Bush to serve on the Governing Board  of the South Florida Water Management District, an entity with an  annual budget of $1.4 billion dollars [sic] and growing. As a Governing  Board member, Ms. Burt-Stewart has been tasked to set policies and provide  leadership and direction."
  An associated e-mail, which included the number of her water district  cell phone, mentions her "good fortune" to receive the appointment. It  says "if and when you come into contact with individuals or entities  that present their business need to you, I ask that you not be shy in  referring me." She also offers to "properly compensate" people for  referrals.
  Burt-Stewart said her consulting company specializes in marketing,  public relations and public affairs.
  Burt-Stewart said she emphasized her appointment to the water district  board in the correspondence as examples of how she has "trust and  integrity" and the "ability to do a job."
  The Florida Commission on Ethics has fielded numerous cases questioning  how public officials emphasize a government position in pursuit of  private gain, spokeswoman Kerrie Stillman said.
  Whether that rises to the level of "misuse of public position" depends  on the individual circumstances, Stillman said. 
  Copyright (c) 2006, South Florida Sun-Sentinel 
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