Jon Greiner

Greiner testifies about Hatch Act

OGDEN — Former Ogden Police Chief Jon Greiner testified before a congressional subcommittee this week about his experiences with the Hatch Act.

Greiner's case may prompt change in Hatch Act

WASHINGTON -- Jon Greiner's election to the Utah Senate caused his firing as Ogden police chief. Philadelphia transit cop Matthew Arlen was barred from a local school board race in Pennsylvania. And New York state port official Terrence Hurley was knocked out of a county race.

Lawmakers, federal agency favor Hatch Act changes

WASHINGTON -- Jon Greiner's election to the Utah Senate caused his firing as Ogden police chief. Philadelphia transit cop Matthew Arlen was barred from a local school board race in Pennsylvania. And New York state port official Terrence Hurley was knocked out of a county race.

All were blindsided by a 1939 law that prohibits federal employees from running in partisan elections but also places the same restriction on state and local government workers whose jobs are connected to federal dollars.

Three committee chairmen in the Senate and one in the House say it's time to update the Hatch Act. Bills in both houses still would prohibit federal employees from participating in partisan political activities, while ending federal prohibitions on state and local government employees seeking elected office.

Jon Greiner has filed for a Weber County Commission seat. (Standard-Examiner file photo)

Full slate of candidates in Weber County

OGDEN — Former Ogden police chief and state Sen. Jon Greiner is back in the political arena, filing his candidacy for Weber County Commission Seat C.

Also filing for the seat are fellow Republican Matthew Bell, chairman of the Weber County Republican Party, and Democrat Corey Combe.

Greiner to speak to Republican women

OGDEN -- Former state. Sen. and Ogden Police Chief Jon Greiner will be the speaker at Tuesday's meeting of the Women's Legislative Council of Weber County.

Greiner

Greiner severance package totals $77,300

OGDEN -- Former Police Chief Jon Greiner, who was fired from his job last month because of a federal Hatch Act violation, will receive a severance package from the city with a gross value of $77,300.

In the city council chambers at the Ogden City Municipal Building on Tuesday, Matthew Godfrey steps down from his seat and his role as mayor of Ogden. Godfrey served as mayor for the last 12 years. (ERIN HOOLEY/Standard-Examiner)

Ogden mayor bids farewell, hammers critics

OGDEN -- In his final address as mayor of Ogden, Matthew Godfrey stopped twice to collect himself. He spoke about how the pressures of public criticism had damaged the family name his father was proud of and how the death of his father four years ago affected him.

A little friendly advice for the coming year

And so it begins ...

Twenty twelve. The year it's all supposed to go south.

If we are to believe certain Internet conspiracy theories, something very, very bad is going to happen on Dec. 21, 2012. That's the date the Mayan calendar -- which has been chugging along like a well-oiled Mesoamerican machine for a whopping 5,126 years -- abruptly comes to an unceremonious end. And then what? Nobody really knows.

Police Chief Jon Greiner demonstrates some of the capabilities of the new Real Time Crime Center at the Ogden Police Department on Tuesday, July 19, 2011.  NICHOLAS DRANEY/Standard-Examiner

Greiner out as Ogden's police chief

OGDEN — Police Chief Jon Greiner was fired Wednesday after 38 years with the city because of a federal Hatch Act violation.

City officials “regretfully” announced Greiner’s termination, effective Friday, in a prepared statement.

“Greiner’s termination was unwanted and involuntary on the part of the city, but was required by the Federal Merit Systems Protection Board, pursuant to the Hatch Act, as a prerequisite to receiving future federal grants and loans,” the statement says. “It is imperative to point out that Greiner’s campaign activities that triggered the Hatch Act do not constitute a crime or a violation of a legal duty on the part of the Chief; rather, they affect only the city’s ability to qualify for future federal funding.”

Officials still weighing options after Hatch Act ruling against Ogden police chief

Poll: What should Ogden do about the Ogden case?

OGDEN -- No decision has yet been made by city officials regarding the status of Police Chief Jon Greiner, according to Mayor Matthew Godfrey.

Jon Greiner

Overall Hatch Act questioned by director of federal agency

OGDEN -- The head of the federal agency prosecuting Ogden Police Chief Jon Greiner for a Hatch Act violation says the 72-year-old law needs an overhaul.

File photo of Ogden police chief Jon Greiner at the State Capitol in Salt Lake City, on Feb. 18, 2010. (DJAMILA GROSSMAN/Standard-Examiner)

Feds: Ogden Police Chief Jon Greiner must go

OGDEN — By a 2 to 1 vote, the federal Merit Systems Protection Board upheld a judge’s 2010 ruling that the city must remove Ogden Police Chief Jon Greiner or forfeit about $215,000 in federal grants because of a violation of the Hatch Act.

Administrative Law Judge Lana Parke determined last year that Greiner violated the Hatch Act because he signed off on a half-dozen federal grants already in place that were valued at more than $1 million during his successful 2006 campaign for the state Senate.

The city appealed Parke’s decision and Greiner, a Republican, did not seek re-election to the Senate in 2010.

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