
Santa Clara once led California in municipal ethics. Its nationally recognized ethics program was studied and copied. Residents trusted it.
In 2008, ten years into the program, 87% of Santa Clara residents said the City was going in the right direction.
In 2024, just 40% said the same thing.
Something is wrong. The people can feel it.
Santa Clara now faces four defining decisions that will either rebuild public trust through ethical leadership—or deepen a City Hall culture that ignores ethics, rejects criticism, excludes the public, and fails to protect public trust.
The choice is now in the hands of the people.
Look at Santa Clara City government today. Is this the best we can do?
What kind of City do you want Santa Clara to become?
In 2000, Santa Clara was on its way to becoming one of the most ethical cities in California.
In 2010, voters approved a new stadium—14,628 to 10,505—in a city of approximately 116,000.
Since then, confidence in the City’s direction has declined sharply.
The share of residents who believe Santa Clara is on the wrong track has grown from 13% to 60%.
At the same time, the ethics program has been dismantled.
The Code of Ethics & Values and Behavioral Standards are now at risk of being replaced with “follow the law” compliance codes—the most minimal standard--and one the City rejected 25 years ago.
Major decisions are increasingly made without meaningful attention to ethics or public trust—and without meaningful public input.
For more than a decade, Santa Clara’s Ethics & Values Program worked.
It worked because it focused on two practical—and measurable— objectives: building public trust and making Santa Clara a great municipal workplace.
Its ground-breaking Code of Ethics & Values—developed with broad stakeholder input—defined what ethical leadership for public trust looks like in practice and required everyone in City service to integrate the Code into their everyday work.
Strong leadership from the City Council, City Manager, and City Attorney, extensive ongoing training, and an engaged public ensured those standards were understood—and enforced.
It worked.
Then it didn’t.
Beginning around 2008—and accelerating after key leadership transitions in 2012—City Council and senior staff priorities shifted. They no longer saw ethics and public trust as central to how the City works.
Since 2015, the program has been quietly dismantled—one piece at a time.
By the time most residents noticed, there was little left to save--only public trust to rebuild.
Santa Clara has created a once-in-a-generation public trust inflection point.
At a time when the City is preparing for global events like the World Cup and managing hundreds of millions of dollars in infrastructure projects, it has also launched four major efforts—all at once:
Each of these decisions could reshape how the City governs itself.
Taken together, they will determine whether Santa Clara strengthens, weakens, or destroys ethical leadership, good governance, and public trust for decades to come. The stakes are that high.
Why are these decisions being treated as separate, uncoordinated efforts—when together they define Santa Clara’s system of ethics, governance, oversight, accountability, and public trust?
Why limit Charter reform so it doesn't even discuss, much less regulate, how the ethics code, the independent ethics commission, and the Stadium "put right" fundamentally reshape City governance?
While the Stadium Authority is a separate legal entity—designed to protect the City’s General Fund—it was never intended to be separate from ethics, governance, oversight, accountability, enforcement, or its fiduciary duty to manage the City’s largest public asset on behalf of the people of Santa Clara.
Why has the Stadium become an “ethics-free zone”?
And why is the City leaving the single greatest threat to public trust outside the ethics, public trust, and accountability frameworks that apppy to the rest of the City?
We don’t know the answers.
But we do know the stakes.
If these decisions move forward without coordination, transparency, and meaningful public engagement, Santa Clara risks moving further toward politics without principle and government without ethics. And once public trust is lost at that level, it can take decades to rebuild.
The time for public engagement, independent oversight, and real accountability is now—before these decisions are locked in.
Will the Charter embed ethics, good governance, and public trust—with real public engagement—and apply them equally to the City and the Stadium Authority?
Or will ethics remain optional, leaving both vulnerable to shifting political control?
Will the City create an independent Ethics Commission with full authority over both the City organization and the Stadium Authority, with real independence, resources, staffing and best practices to succeed with ethics and public trust training, advice, enforcement, and oversight?
Or will it establish a weak body, an ethics "program"—or continue with no meaningful oversight at all?
Will Santa Clara restore and strengthen its values-based Code of Ethics & Values—and apply it to the Stadium Authority?
Or replace it with a minimal compliance code—or none at all—leaving the Stadium Authority without meaningful standards?
A one-time Stadium "put right" decision to transfer operational control to the 49ers—for both NFL and non-NFL events—and give the 49ers all the revenue from all sources for the next 27 years.
Will the 49er-PAC majority approve what the team wants or get independent analysis of benefits and liabilities and decide for the people?
Every major decision is evaluated for cost, efficiency, and legality.
But two questions are almost never asked:
When these questions are ignored, even legal and efficient decisions can fail the most important test: Does the public believe that decision-makers are acting solely in the public’s best interest? That belief is necessary for public trust.
Now, with so much at stake, these questions are even more important. They have the power to change the City's future--if the public engages, insists, and prevails.
When we refer to “the government” in this section, we are referring primarily to the City Council, City Manager, and City Attorney—as individuals and as a group making decisions and setting direction for the City.
The analyses and conclusions you will find throughout this site are based on publicly available information, our own communications with City officials, and reporting from reputable news organizations.
A clear pattern emerges from these sources. It describes what City government looks like today through an ethics lens and with a public trust perspective.
To understand what this Council really thinks about ethical leadership, one another, the public, and the Ethics & Values Program it has been dismantling, we encourage residents to watch—or read the transcript of—the July 11, 2023 Council meeting.
The agenda item was whether to establish an independent ethics commission, as recommended by the Santa Clara County Civil Grand Jury in Unsportsmanlike Conduct (October 2022).
The Council had already rejected the recommendation once for its January 2023 official response. It was brought back for discussion and reconsideration six months later.
The discussion was the final 50 minutes of a six-hour meeting. Only the Council and senior staff were present in Council Chambers.
Very few members of the public, if any, watched online. No media covered it.
City staff made no formal recommendation—an unusual occurrence.
As you watch or read, keep in mind that some statements reflect individual opinions or incomplete information, and may not fully reflect the City’s ethics program as it was actually designed and implemented. A question to guide your thinking:
Watch the meeting or read the transcript.
Draw your own conclusions.
Read what was missing from the agenda report →
See the Candidate Guide to Running for Office →
Over the past several years, a clear pattern has emerged in Santa Clara’s most important decisions.
These examples show what happens when ethics and public trust are left out of decision-making.
Each of these decisions would likely have been very different if the City had asked—and answered honestly—two questions:
Why, if at all, is this the right thing to do for the people of Santa Clara?
How, if at all, is this likely to build public trust?
For additional details for each numbered story below, click on the + (plus) sign on the left. To close the details, click on the - (minus) sign.
Now the same City Council that made the ethically questionable decisions we listed above faces four decisions that present a genuine opportunity to rebuild public trust — perhaps the most significant opportunity in a generation.
But the 49er PAC majority and senior City staff, who have enabled them for the past three years, are approaching these decisions the same way they have approached ethics, accountability, and public participation since they were elected in 2020: hire a consultant they control, structure the process to limit public input, and reach a predetermined conclusion.
The window to change that outcome is open at this moment in mid-March 2026. It will not stay open long.
For four years, residents have complained. Three Civil Grand Jury reports have documented ethics and governance failures. An ethics expert has been raising the alarm publicly since 2022. The City's own survey shows 60% of residents believe Santa Clara is going in the wrong direction.
Nothing changed. If anything, the complaints and reports have only sped up what we can only describe as an anti-ethics and anti public trust agenda.
We hope there is another explanation: gross incompetence,
Someone realized the easiest way to stop ethics complaints is to eliminate the ethics code — so they are replacing Santa Clara's comprehensive, values-centered Code with a follow-the-law compliance document, drafted behind closed doors by a law firm.
Someone realized the more they rejected an independent ethics commission, the more the Civil Grand Jury would keep recommending one — so now they are studying it, asking questions that cities of every size have already answered, until they can say: we studied it, and it's just not right for Santa Clara.
That is what this site does. Here is what we promise:
We will be fact-based. Our analyses ask what a reasonable person would conclude with access only to what the public can access: what does this document actually say, and what does it mean for public trust? We follow the evidence. We correct errors when we find them.
We will cover what is happening — the ethics code revision, the ethics commission study, the Charter Review — through an ethics lens, so residents are informed about what their government is doing, or failing to do.
We will tell you what the documents mean — not just what they say. Grand Jury reports, contracts, meeting transcripts, public records. Translated into plain language, analyzed for their ethics and public trust implications.
We will create space for genuine democratic dialogue — because the City has been steadily removing opportunities for residents to speak to their government, much less to one another. That space needs to exist somewhere.
We will not tell you what to think — but what to think about, how to think it through, and how to turn thought into practical and effective action for the common good.
We will be honest about what we don't know — and rigorous about what we do.

Twenty-five years ago, a long-time Santa Clara resident on the ethics ordinance committee pulled Dr. Shanks aside after one of the committee meetings. He didn't want Dr. Shanks to be disappointed if other residents didn't respond to the request to participate in the ethics development process.
"You've got to understand," he said. "Santa Clara residents won't respond to City Hall unless there's a bulldozer with the City's name on it in their front yard. It's already knocked down the fence and it's on its way to the front door. Then they'll respond."
After working on this site for the past three months, we believe that bulldozer has arrived. It has already knocked down the front fence, and it's on its way to the front door. There is no time to lose.
The people are the only force with the political power to change a city's direction. Thomas Jefferson understood what this moment requires:
Whenever the people are well informed they can be trusted with their own government; that whenever things get so far wrong as to attract their notice, they may be relied on to set them to rights.
Article II Section 1 of California's Constitution makes it law:
All political power is inherent in the people. Government is instituted for their protection, security, and benefit, and they have the right to alter or reform it when the public good may require.
The public good needs your attention. Public Trust Now is here to help.
Santa Clara was once a role model for ethical leadership and public trust. Residents can help the City become that again. Here's how to start.