SEC. 6.102. CITY ATTORNEY.

§ 6.102

ComplexControversial
In plain language

The City Attorney represents the City in legal proceedings and performs various legal duties including providing legal advice, approving contracts and ordinances, and administering a claims bureau. The section also establishes a process allowing elected officials and department heads to retain outside counsel if they believe the City Attorney has a conflict of interest, subject to review by a retired judge, and prohibits the City Attorney from contributing to or endorsing candidates for City office.

The City Attorney is the lawyer for San Francisco. The City Attorney represents the city in court cases, gives legal advice to city departments, reviews contracts and laws before they're approved, and handles claims and damages against the city. However, if a city official or department thinks the City Attorney has a conflict of interest (a reason to favor one side over another), they can ask to hire a different lawyer instead. If the City Attorney says there's no conflict, the official can ask a retired judge to decide. The retired judge will make a final decision about whether the official can use outside counsel. The City Attorney cannot donate money to, support, or campaign for candidates for city office, except for themselves.

  • Complex:The first subsection contains an elaborate multi-step process with conditional branches, time limits, and procedural rules for resolving conflicts of interest, making it significantly longer and more convoluted than other subsections.
  • Controversial:The prohibition on the City Attorney making political contributions or endorsements may be viewed as limiting free speech or as an appropriate ethics measure, depending on perspective.

AI-generated · claude-haiku-4-5 · informational only, not legal advice.

Official text

(Amended November 2001; amended November 2002)

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