
Archive for the 'Arizona government' Category
October 6th, 2009, 4:28 pm by Le Templar
 Kris Mayes, Arizona Corporation Commission chairwoman, finds herself trying to manage a budget meltdown while lawmakers feud with the governor (Tribune file photo).
I’ve been watching from afar the pending crash of the Arizona Corporation Commission because it doesn’t have the necessary funds to keep operating as intended. It’s baffles me, because Republican state lawmakers have been chanting loudly that the best economic stimulus would be to create a climate that attracts new businesses and creates more jobs. But without budget fix soon for the corporation commission, requests to do business in the state will be delayed for months. That’s a jobs killer, not a jobs creator.
So what’s up with GOP lawmakers refusing to come to the Capitol to again adopt a relatively simple solution that passed before, but was blocked by a budget veto from Gov. Jan Brewer that targeted another issue?
I keep circling back to a statement first made by House Speaker Kirk Adams, R-Mesa, on the day that Brewer issued this veto. Adams said the governor had the discretion to use federal stimulus money to cover funding shortfalls at the corporation commission and several other state agencies, rather than expecting lawmakers to come back in special session to address it.
Adams’ implied message: Brewer created the problem, so it’s up to her to fix it or to take the blame for any fiscal meltdowns.
The challenge for Brewer is if she acts as Adams’ suggests, she will look as if she cares more about business lobbyists, tax collectors and lottery players, than she does for education, health care and public safety (areas where the lion’s share of stimulus money is likely to be spent).
Just this week, lawmakers finally are talking about another budget special session because this year’s deficit now appears to be $1.5 billion. But any action could be a month or two away, and the corporation commission will slow down the wheels of business creation long before then.
Posted in: Arizona Legislature • Arizona government • Economic development • Governor • Arizona Corportation Commission • Jan Brewer • Kirk Adams • Kris Mayes • state budget | Post a Comment »
October 5th, 2009, 5:06 pm by Le Templar
 Jason Rose (right) is the public relations specialist/political strategist who is in charge of attracting public attention to the likely campaign for governor of Paradise Valley Mayor Vernon Parker (left).
Now that Republican Vernon Parker is in the race for governor (almost), we in the media received today the first of what could be daily missives from his press agent, Scottsdale political provocateur Jason Rose. Typically, a candidate or business hires Rose’s PR firm to make a big public splash and then to keep the spotlight burning, as Rose and Co. specialize in attention-grabbing headlines and other tactics almost guaranteed to generate publicity — even though some of it makes the intended audience go “what the heck?” or “Ewwww!”
But what Rose is really good at is framing talking points and campaign slogans with instant emotional appeal that might, or might not, stand up to critical examination.
Today’s news release is an example of this. Parker (via Rose) wants to tap into widespread Republican opposition to Gov. Jan Brewer’s proposed temporary sales tax increase. Parker’s statement says Brewer wants to raise this tax before even reducing her own staff:
“Many Arizonans are suffering. Many state agencies are cutting. The Governor’s Office should do the same. I will,” Parker said. “Should I be fortunate enough to be elected Governor I would make these necessary cuts on Day One.”
Parker goes on to say, as Paradise Valley mayor, he has cut the town’s spending by 25 percent and the budget for mayor and Town Council by 54 percent. What Parker doesn’t mention is any reference to what those cuts were or how they might translate to the governor’s office. It’s important to note that the Paradise Valley mayor and council combined spent $83,108 last year and will spend $50,175 this year, a far cry from the $7.6 million set aside for the governor’s office this year.
Also, Parker’s math is a little fuzzy. Paradise Valley’s tax revenues are projected to be down by 25 percent from when Parker became mayor in June 2008 ($21.9 million to $16.3 million). But town operations will spend 16.4 percent less ($19.5 million to $16.3 million). The spending-to-revenue gap of nearly 9 percent will be filled with cash-on-hand saved from past tax collections. A similar savings account for the state was drained dry in January.
Parker also doesn’t mention a single position in the governor’s office that he would eliminate or any specific cost savings he would pursue.
Oddly enough, Parker (via Rose) could have made a stronger statement simply by highlighting the budget numbers for the governor’s office, which have risen by nearly $210,000 from last year as explained by the Legislature’s official budget summary. This stands in contrast with the state agencies that Brewer oversees, which have undergone at least three rounds of budget reductions and have been asked to prepare for another 15 to 20 percent in cuts mid-year. Parker’s news release includes a web link to the governor’s office budget, but fails to note the increase in spending.
UPDATE: Brewer’s press secretary, Paul Senseman, told me by email Wednesday morning that the governor’s office needed additional staffing so far this year to comply with tracking and auditing requirements for use of federal stimulus funds. But Senseman added Brewer plans to include mid-year cuts to her office when she sends new budget proposals to the Legislature in the near future.
Posted in: Arizona Legislature • Arizona government • Election issues • Governor • Jan Brewer • Jason Rose • Vernon Parker | 2 Comments »
September 29th, 2009, 10:10 am by Le Templar
Everyone in Arizona knows the state faces an immediate operating budget deficit of nearly $1 billion, and a long-range or “structural” deficit of $3 billion to $4 billion. The situation is so dire that Gov. Jan Brewer has asked state agencies to deliver proposals for scaling back by yet another 15 to 20 percent in mid-year spending cuts. So what should those state agencies be considering in proposals for the next budget year, which are due in the governor’s office by Thursday?
The Arizona Board of Regents has decided to demand more money, a lot more money, as in a 46 percent increase.
At the Board of Regents monthly meeting last week (held in Flagstaff), there was widespread frustration with the state budget situation and how it is affecting the state’s three public universities. The university presidents point out the state hasn’t raised funding to match the record growth in student enrollment, and hasn’t provided enough cash for building construction or major maintenance.
The Board of Regents’ staff had prepared an agenda item that offered to raise state university funding from $1.04 billion to $1.36 billion*, or a 15 percent increase. That alone seems rather lofty.
But a few regents asked the three presidents to hastily come up with a new proposal that reflects the “true cost” of public university education. Arizona State University President Michael Crow clearly was eager to do so. He boldly accused state lawmakers of violating the state constitution because they haven’t raised taxes to give his school more money, as you can see in the video below from the regents’ meeting:
The new budget proposal would raise state funding for universities to $1.459 billion or a $459.1 million increase. For about 30 minutes, the regents debated whether to send both budget choices to the governor’s office, or just the massively more expensive option, as board President Ernest Calderon explained:
The board deadlocked at 5-5 on the motion that would have sent both budget choices to Brewer and lawmakers. Then, the board voted 7-3 to submit the 46 percent increase.
If you watch the whole video, you will see that regent Fred Boice of Tucson is the only person who injects any sort of common sense:
“I think, consciously or subconsciously, we have taken a step into a different world. And that for us to go to (lawmakers) and hand them a bill for $(459) million, knowing full well they can’t balance their current budget, that is a bit inappropriate.”
It’s too bad Boice’s comments came after the last vote.
Most of the discussion on the video suggests the regents are taking a brave, new stance in defense of university education. But, in fact, the universities and board regents have a recent track record of being completely unrealistic in budget matters.
In the spring of 2008, the universities convinced then-Gov. Janet Napolitano to push for $1.4 billion in new building construction, even though the details of the state’s budget woes already were starting to emerge. The universities’ pitch was the construction would be a state economic stimulus, as if that somehow would be popular in this politically conservative state.
The Legislature reluctantly went along with last year’s request, and then delayed the funding because of the growing budget problems.* This year’s proposal will be laughed right out the door.
But this is no laughing matter. Pushing for a showdown with such absurd budget numbers will seriously damage the Board of Regents’ credibility with lawmakers, while creating false hope among the thousands of university employees who are far more likely to be laid off in the coming months.
*NOTE: This post has been updated to reflect the fact that the Legislature approved a version of last year’s university construction stimulus plan, formally known as SPEED. The original post incorrectly said the Legislature rejected it. As updated, the post explains the plan was later delayed because of budget issues. Also, a decimal error in one of the proposed budget numbers has been corrected.
Posted in: Arizona Legislature • Arizona State University • Arizona government • Governor • Arizona Board of Regents • Ernest Calderon • Jan Brewer • Michael Crow • state budget | 2 Comments »
September 23rd, 2009, 3:06 pm by Le Templar
In a sign that Arizona politics continues to attract national interest, a Democratic political pollster based in Raleigh, N.C., is rolling out a series of quick turnaround voter surveys related to 2010 statewide elections. Results released today from Public Policy Polling shows Arizona voters currently favor Democrat and Arizona Attorney General Terry Goddard to be the next governor over Republican incumbent Jan Brewer and two other GOP big names: state Treasurer Dean Martin and former Gov. Fife Symington. (Paradise Valley Mayor Vernon Parker, who is formally announcing his move into the race tonight, wasn’t offered as a choice.)
On Tuesday, the same firm released polling numbers about President Barack Obama and potential Republican challengers in 2012.
Spokesman Tom Jensen said told me his firm is looking at the political climate in various states across the U.S. this fall where there’s expected to be hot races for U.S. senator and governor in 2010. This week happens to be Arizona’s turn. The firm is covering the costs of these polls out of its own pocket, presumably to drum up publicity and to attract individual candidates as clients.
Jensen said the firm will release survey details Thursday about potential Democratic challengers to Sen. John McCain (Janet Napolitano?). On Friday, it will have a closer look at possible Republican primary match-ups.
Public Policy Polling is upfront about its political leanings but insists that it focuses on honest results. The firm doesn’t have much experience in Arizona. Jensen told me its pollsters first sampled state voters in August 2008 to see if Barack Obama had any shot at upsetting McCain in his home state during the presidential election. Seeing that McCain had a lead of 12 percentage points, Public Policy Polling didn’t waste any more time here.
McCain’s biggest threat in the 2010 Senate race would be in the Republican primary and not from any Democrats, especially since Napolitano still will be running Homeland Security. But Democrats are eager about Goddard heading their 2010 ticket and potentially elevating other candidates. So Public Policy Polling is back and ringing up registered voters again.
Posted in: Arizona government • Congress • Election issues • 2010 elections • Dean Martin • Fife Symington • Jan Brewer • Public Policy Polling • Terry Goddard • Vernon Parker | Post a Comment »
September 22nd, 2009, 5:12 pm by Le Templar
 Vernon Parker/submitted photo
Paradise Valley Mayor Vernon Parker has been talking for weeks about possibly entering next year’s race for Arizona governor as a Republican. He took a step closer today toward a possible challenge to Gov. Jan Brewer by creating an exploratory committee. This comes a day ahead of a public rally at InterContinental Montelucia Resort and Spa that Parker’s PR expert has been promoting as a “major announcement.” The setting and tone of Parker’s speech is likely to make him look exactly like a candidate running for statewide office, although he might not actually declare just yet to avoid any questions about triggering Arizona’s “resign to run” law. Parker certainly has created a lot of buzz among Republicans that, as a candidate of color, he could match enthusiasm for Barack Obama among independents and moderate voters of both major parties. Parker also could be viewed as an outsider to the state Capitol who would bring some fresh ideas to tackling the state budget mess. I expect Parker to oppose Brewer’s proposed sales tax election, so it will be interesting to see how he would pursue shrinking state government by $3 billion to $4 billion to match current tax revenues.
A huge plus for Parker is he already has picked up the support of Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arapio, although Arpaio supplied the oddest sounding endorsement today in a news release from Parker’s camp:
” ‘Mayor Parker is a stand-up guy with an unbelievable personal story. His candidacy would be very good for our Party and potentially our state,’ said Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio, qualifying that he has still not closed the door completely on running for governor himself and is not yet endorsing any candidate for governor if he does not run.”
Posted in: Arizona government • Election issues • Governor • Jan Brewer • Vernon Parker | 1 Comment »
September 17th, 2009, 12:08 pm by Le Templar
 Nick Dranias/Goldwater Institute
In honor of Constitution Week, the Goldwater Institute has released report that compares the 50 state constitutions to what we usually consider the gold standard. As Goldwater is a think tank devoted to the philosophy of limited government and economic freedom, report author Nick Dranias naturally reviews the state constitutions from that perspective.
In “50 Bright Stars,” Dranias concludes nearly every state has a fundamental document that offers more protections for civic rights and more restrictions on the scope and power of government than is described in the U.S. Constitution or as interpreted by the U.S. Supreme Court. The state constitutions that shine the brightest for freedom are found in Arizona, Alabama, Tennessee and Idaho, Dranias concludes after combining his own analysis with the Mercatus Center’s economic freedom study.
In fact, Arizona ranks first in one of Dranias’ charts that factors in 10 different benchmarks for a classic constitutional republic. That result might be bit of home state bias, as Arizona’s actual score based on Dranias’ analysis was matched by Florida and Louisiana.
Before we puff up our chests too much, Dranias has one, giant caveat — neither state or federal governments really look anything like the limited structures that were envisioned by the framers of the U.S. Constitution in 1787:
“In a very real sense, Arizonans and the residents
of a handful of other states hold the flame
of liberty in their hands — a flame with the
illumination of a match-light, not a torch.
Whether or not we can keep that flame
alive, grow it, and spread its illumination
across the nation depends critically upon
focusing limited resources where they will
have the greatest impact.”
Posted in: Arizona government • Libertarian values • Arizona Constitution • Constitution Day • Goldwater Institute | 1 Comment »
September 16th, 2009, 1:20 pm by Le Templar
The Arizona critics seem to agree. Not even professional comedic writers/fake reporters such as The Daily Show’s Jason Jones can be funny when it comes to the enormous deficits plaguing the state budget. The Tucson Weekly, the Arizona Guardian, and everyday viewers all shared my view that last night’s segment about selling the legislative buildings to raise cash was not The Daily Show’s best work.
Jones’ tact was to act as an investor exploring the potential (and down sides) of being the Legislature’s new landlord. He was hampered by the fact that only legislative Democrats would agree to take part, when we all know it was the Republicans who were behind this plan. Sen. Linda Lopez, D-Tucson, filled in and tried defend the idea, but clearly she didn’t believe in what she was saying. I did like the scene where Jones scrolled “unannounced” into the House office of Rep. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Phoenix, climbed on her desk and pushed up a ceiling tile to inspect the dark shadows above.
You can check out the segment for yourself below:

Posted in: Arizona Legislature • Arizona government • Jason Jones • Kyrsten Sinema • Linda Lopez • state budget • The Daily Show | 1 Comment »
September 15th, 2009, 3:25 pm by Le Templar
 Jason Jones, correspondent for the Comedy Central's "The Daily Show," taped a piece Aug. 12 at the Arizona state Capitol (Capitol Media Services photo by Howard Fischer).
“The Daily Show” will finally get around to airing tonight a “news story” about Arizona’s plans to balance its budget by selling off state-owned buildings such as the offices in the state Senate and House (and then leasing them back for state use). Daily Show correspondent Jason Jones sparked a buzz while he was here in mid-August to film his report. Steve Albani, a spokesman for The Daily Show, confirmed Jones’ piece will be featured at 11 p.m. on the show’s second episode after a three-week summer vacation.
If you can’t watch tonight, Albani said the episode will be repeated a couple of times tomorrow on Comedy Central, and individual segments will be available for online viewing as well.
Posted in: Arizona Legislature • Arizona government • Comedy Central • Jason Jones • state budget • The Daily Show | Post a Comment »
September 11th, 2009, 3:00 pm by Le Templar
KTVK-TV (Channel 3) caught something rather odd today. The Arizona State Retirement System accidentally sent 20,000 copies of its latest newsletter to people who aren’t members or retirees, and most of the intended recipients apparently are no longer with us.
The ASRS is the retirement pension system for most state employees and a variety of local governments as well. I can easily understand sending a newsletter to everyone who is a member and including a few people who have recently died. But 20,000? That seems outrageous, until you realize that ASRS has more than 548,000 members and retirees. The erroneous newsletters were mailed to less than 3 percent of that total.
The agency posted an explanation about the error yesterday, saying it sent the wrong data file to the outside vendor that printed and mailed the newsletter. Channel 3 noted the irony that the agency director’s front-page message was about how ASRS is working to be environmentally friendly by cutting down on the number of newsletter mailings. (A online link to the newsletter is current not working.)
Posted in: Arizona government • ASRS • Channel 3 • KTVK | Post a Comment »
September 10th, 2009, 4:28 pm by Le Templar
 Sandra O'Connor/Capitol Media Services
Now that’s she retired from the Supreme Court, Sandra Day O’Connor is starting to relive the days when she was one of Arizona’s top politicians.
O’Connor has started the “O’Connor House Project,” in which she will use the relocated house from she lived in Paradise Valley as a place to talk about public policies ideas. And now she has launched a kitchen think tank made up of dozens of the state’s most powerful and influential people to work on updating the structure of state government. O’Connor held a news conference today to unveil the first set of proposals that her unofficial coalition would like to have adopted by the time the state centennial arrives.
None of the biggest ideas that would require constitutional amendments are really new. Proposals to have an elected lieutenant government have been around since the early 1990s; state voters actually rejected the office in 1994. Gov. Jan Brewer lobbied the Legislature for several years to ask voters again when she was secretary of state. The Tribune Editorial Board has been among a variety of voices suggesting some elected offices — such as state mine inspector — should be eliminated in favor of appointed positions. And many Republican lawmakers desperately want to do away with the 1998 Voter Protection Act, or least to modify it to ease the handcuffs placed by voter-approved initiatives.
But O’Connor can galvanize new attention to these proposals. And she can use her rare status as a living political legend to motivate disparate political forces to work together. Capitol Media Service notes in today’s story that legislative leaders from both parties are part of O’Connor’s kitchen think tank. That makes it more likely such proposals could move through the Legislature in time for the 2010 or 2012 general elections.
Posted in: Arizona Legislature • Arizona government • Arizona secretary of state • Governor • Jan Brewer • Sandra O'Connor • state mining inspector | 1 Comment »
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