Showing posts with label Events. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Events. Show all posts

Thursday, September 20, 2012

Project Civil Discourse: A Statewide Conversation on

Project Civil Discourse is an initiative of the Arizona Humanities Council, dedicated to fostering an environment that facilitates, rather than impedes, constructive discussion of political issues in Arizona.

Next week, they'll be conducting a statewide forum on some of the questions that will be on the ballot in November.  The announcement -

Mapping Arizona's Future

Thursday, September 27, 2012
6:00 to 9:00pm
Free & Open to the Public

A Statewide Conversation on
Arizona's Key Ballot Propositions

Michael Grant, former host of KAET-TV's Horizon and prominent valley attorney, will moderate a panel of experts (Justice Ruth McGregor, former Chief Justice for the Arizona Supreme Court, Ken Strobeck, Executive Director of the League of Arizona Cities and Towns, and Howie Fischer, Chief Correspondent at Capitol Media Services) and participant roundtable discussions on three key ballot propositions.
  • Prop 115: Judicial Selection
  • Prop 204: Quality Education and Jobs
  • Prop 121: Open Government

A Simulcast Discussion Around Arizona



Space is Limited, Pre-registration is Required
For more information, please contact Jamie Martin at 602-257-0335 x26 or jmartin@azhumanities.org


I'll be attending the forum at the Scottsdale Community College location, the location nearest to me; if one of the locations is close to you, sign up and reserve your spot.

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Dogs (and dog owners) rally against Romney in Tempe Friday

Mitt Romney, the presumptive Republican nominee for president, is holding an event in Tempe tomorrow. 

It won't be the only event in Tempe tomorrow.

The (all new!) D26 Democrats and other folks who cherish our four-legged friends will be on hand to remind Romney that cruelty to animals isn't an endearing quality in candidates for public office.

From an email -

Dogs Against Romney Tempe Rally
What: Protest Mitt Romney's Tempe Rally
When: This Friday, 2:00pm!
Where: Papago Dog Park (NE corner of Curry and College in Tempe)

Wednesday, January 04, 2012

The Tucson shooting, one year later: memorials, dedications, and celebrations

It's been almost a year since the mass shooting in Tucson, when Jared Loughner shattered the peace of a quiet Saturday by taking a pistol with an extended ammo clip and shooting as many people as he was able to before he was tackled by bystanders while he reloaded.

When the smoke cleared, six of his victims lay dead or dying while 13 others, including Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords, were wounded.

As the anniversary approaches, different folks and organization are commemorating the anniversary in different ways.

...Tonight (Wednesday, January 4) at 7, Channel 12 (Phoenix) will be airing a program that includes retired Supreme Court Sandra Day O'Connor and a group of students discussing ways that the next generation can bring civility to public discourse.  Inspired by and in honor of Christina Taylor Green, the youngest victim of the Tucson shooting.

...Earlier today, a trailhead east of Tucson was dedicated in honor of Gabe Zimmerman, one of the fatalities in Tucson and a staffer for Congresswoman Giffords.  On a related note, on Saturday at 8:30 a.m. there will be hikes up South Mountain in Phoenix in honor of Zimmerman, a noted hiker.  The event in Phoenix will also be a food drive for St. Mary's Food Bank.

...Saturday, there will be a candlelight vigil at the state capitol on West Washington in Phoenix, starting at 7 p.m.

...Sunday at 1 p.m., there will be an interfaith memorial service at St. Augustine Cathedral, 192 S. Stone Ave., Tucson.  The service will include Christian, Jewish, Muslim, Baha'i and Sikh prayers and rituals.

...Sunday at 3 p.m. at University of Arizona's Centennial Hall, The Fund for Civility, Respect and Understanding will sponsor REFLECTIONS: Honoring the Lives of the January 8 Shooting Victims.  A series of speakers, mostly colleagues or friends of the victims, will speak about the lives of the victims and survivors.

...Sunday at 6:30 p.m., there will be a vigil on the University of Arizona Mall.  Hosted by the Community Foundation for Southern Arizona and The University of Arizona Medical Center, the vigil will feature a number of speakers, including Ron Barber, a survivor of the shooting, Jonathan Rothschild, mayor of Tucson, and Mark Kelly, husband of Gabrielle Giffords.

...and last, and certainly least appropriate, the gun-toters crowd is celebrating ignoring (Really!  The date is just a coincidence!  Just ask the organizers!) the deaths and shattered lives by holding a gun show on the anniversary.

From KVOA -

With the anniversary of the January 8th tragedy less than a week away, we've learned a gun show is coming to Tucson that very day.

"I don't understand why they would do it that day. Not the day that Gabrielle Giffords was shot," said Casandra Ridlinghafer.


Wonder if they will have a special on Glocks with extended clips at the show?

The website Remembering January 8th has a more complete list of events hereReports are that Congresswoman Giffords will attend some events, but her schedule has not been announced.

Saturday, October 22, 2011

A little politics, a little wine: Just another Thursday night in Scottsdale

Thursday evening, Zocalo Public Square, along with ASU, put on a panel about how Arizona has moved to the forefront of America's political discussion.

The panel was led by Marc Lacey, Phoenix bureau chief for the New York Times, and included Jennifer Steen, a political science professor at ASU, Art Hamilton, a long-time figure on the Arizona political scene (including more than a quarter-century in the Arizona House of Representatives), and Tom Zoellner, an author, former journalist, and fifth-generation Arizonan.








(left to right - Lacey, Steen, Hamilton, and Zoellner)








The event took place at the Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art (SMoCA).

Zocalo Public Square has its report on the event here, and some brief offerings on the topic from a group of observers of the Arizona scene here.

ZPS's write-up is decent (if a little too "cheerleader"  for my taste), but it did leave out a few important things...like my impressions.  :)








Lacey








...Lacey and the panelists, as expected, knew their stuff, but they made a couple of factual errors, the most glaring of which was Lacey's statement that the US Supreme Court has overturned Arizona's Clean Elections system.  If fact, as bad as their decision was, they only set aside the matching provisions section of the law.

However, the few errors were very minor.  My biggest quibble with the session was that it was so short.

While the discussion was nearly 90 minutes long, the topic can barely be skimmed in that time.  They tried, but most of the more in-depth talk was during the after-event wine social.  I didn't stay for more than a few minutes of that, so I can't really write about that part of the evening.  Maybe if it had involved beer... :)

The topics covered in the main discussion included the immigration debate, the state's gun culture, the decline of civility in in politics and other civic matters, electoral demographics and more.

Of course, my guess is that both the organizers of the event and the panelists understand that an in-depth analysis was impossible to achieve at such a short event, but also realize that the discussion needs to start somewhere.






Hamilton










...Hamilton delivered the best observations, and the best one-liners, of the evening, illustrating both his long experience with Arizona's politics and his quick wit.

- "The ultimate affront was when a friend of mine, the just-past speaker of the Mississippi House of Representatives, told me he was glad we were in the news because it made him feel better about Mississippi." (from Zocalo's report on the event; I noted the quote, but my notes sucked :) )

- SB1070 was an "E-ticket ride" to a full term as governor for Jan Brewer

- "If you think the cost of education is high, consider the cost of ignorance."

- When Lacey asked Hamilton to "psychanalyze" the legislature and other leaders of Arizona's politics, Hamilton responded with "I would suggest 'psycho' without the 'analyzing.' "

- One subject area where Hamilton was far more tactful than most other observers (including this one) would be was on the topic of the influence of ALEC, the American Legislative Exchange Council, on public policy proposals in Arizona.  He said that ALEC may have a conservative bent, but it is a legitimate organization.

I would have said that ALEC exists mostly to put corporate interests with deep pockets together with legislators with shallow morals.







Steen









...Steen, the ASU professor, brought an outsider's perspective (formerly on the faculties of Boston College and Yale) and has some experience in partisan activity (former PC, delegate to a national convention and member of the Electoral College).  However, it was easy to see her academic background - while she made some dead-on observations, she loves statistics and wants to see some hard numbers of the effect of SB1070 on the number of Hispanic residents in Arizona.






Zoellner










...Zoellner, an author and former journalist, has worked for Gabrielle Giffords and is a fifth-generation Arizonan.

- I don't know Zoellner, but he won my respect early on when he mentioned (and gave credit to) Jon Talton's term about the Arizona economy, the "Real Estate Industrial Complex."

- He noted that in 2010 when he returned to help with the Giffords campaign, he almost didn't recognize his hometown (Tucson) because the political environment there and statewide has become so toxic and "nasty."

- He also noted that much of the contentiousness/increase in nativism in AZ may be due to the generational shift of the state's demographics.  A majority of the state's older (>65 years old) is white/Anglo, while a majority of its younger (<18) residents are Latino/other ethnic or racial group), and the older folks are *not* happy about that reality.

Overall, while it wasn't an occasion where most experienced observers of Arizona politics would learn something new or gain some heretofore unknown insight, it was nice to just sit and talk about politics without the shouting of tea party/Republican types.  It was a serious discussion for serious people with a serious interest in public policy, and more of this is needed.


There were a few members of the audience that I knew - Steve Muratore of The Arizona Eagletarian was there, asking the question about ALEC that brought forth the tactful response from Art Hamilton.  I'd have taken a picture of him asking the question, but it would have been a pic of the back of his head. 

Probably not a pic that would add to the story.  :))

Also at the discussion was Jerry Gettinger, a friend and occasional contributor to this blog.






Jerry asking a question














The audience.  Note the TV cameras.  The event was recorded for a November broadcast on C-SPAN.










Later...

Wednesday, July 06, 2011

Arizona Independent Redistricting Commission meeting Friday

The Arizona Independent Redistricting Commission (AIRC) is scheduled to hold a meeting on Friday.

Info:

Location - Room 312, Executive Tower (Pharmacy Board Meeting Room), 1700 West Washington, Phoenix

Time - 9:30 a.m.

Agenda - here

After the last meeting, where a number of tea party types showed up to disrupt the meeting and attempted to intimidate members of the Commission and members of the public, a strong turnout of people who are actually concerned about the future of Arizona is called for.

The Commission needs to hear both that competitive districts are important to the future of Arizona and that people acknowledge and are grateful for the efforts of the members.

And they need to see that most of the people for whom they toil are civil, rational human beings.

Be there folks, whether you are a Democrat, Independent, Libertarian, Green, or something else (yes, even a Republican). 

Friday, April 29, 2011

Event: Immigration: Myths and Misconceptions

Info courtesy the LD8 Democrats:
Immigration: Myths and Misconceptions. A Community Forum
(45 minutes of panel discussion followed by 45 minutes of Q & A)

When?
Tuesday, May 3rd at 6:30pm (doors open at 6:00)



Where?
Scottsdale Community College: Student Center, Turquoise Room
(Just East of the Loop 101 at Chaparral)
Please park in Lot A



Who? (The Panelists)

Alfredo Gutierrez: Former AZ State Senator, radio host
John Loredo: Former AZ State Representative
Todd Landfried: Spokesman, Arizona Employers for Immigration Reform
Lisa Urias: President/CEO at Urias Communications

Terry Greene Sterling: Journalist and Author
Ezequiel Hernandez Immigration Attorney, VP of Somos America

Sunday, January 30, 2011

North Indian Bend Wash Superfund Area: Community Involvement Group Meeting

The Community Involvement Group (CIG) for the North Indian Bend Wash Superfund Site (NIBW) will hold a meeting next week in Scottsdale to discuss ongoing cleanup activities related to the groundwater contamination in the NIBW (roughly, the borders are the Salt River on the south, Chaparral Road on the north, Pima Road on the east, and Scottsdale Road on the west).

Participants will include representatives of the EPA, ADEQ, City of Scottsdale, SRP, Arizona American Water, the "participating" companies (aka - the companies responsible for the contamination and its clean up) and concerned members of the community.

Meeting details:
Wednesday, February 9, 2011
5:30 pm – 7:30 pm
Scottsdale Center for the Performing Arts (Stage 2 – Main Floor)
7380 E. Second Street, Scottsdale
 
Agenda: 
 
Indian Bend Wash Five-Year Review Status

Overview of NIBW Groundwater Data
Miller Road Treatment Facility Long-Term Measures Workplan & Schedule
Questions & Answers
 
For more information contact

Vicki Rosen, EPA Community Involvement Coordinator
(415) 972-3244 or rosen.vicki@epa.gov
Or

Felicia Calderon, ADEQ Community Involvement Coordinator
(602) 771-4167 or calderon.felicia@adeq.gov
 
Background on the NIBW can be found here and here.
 
Later!
 

Sunday, January 23, 2011

The coming week - legislative edition

As usual, all info gathered from the website of the Arizona Legislature or other online sources, and subject to change without notice. 

"SHR" indicates that a meeting room is a Senate Hearing Room; "HHR" indicates a House Hearing Room.


Committee hearings on the Senate side of the Capitol this week -

- Rules will meet in Caucus Room 1 on Monday upon adjournment of the floor session.  The agenda is a long one, but the meeting probably won't be, as the committee exists only as a gatekeeper/rubber stamp.  It either refuses to hear any bills that the Senate President doesn't like and to push through those he does approve of.  Lowlights this week:  SB1136 and SR1001, a bill to block a tribal casino in the West Valley and a resolution opposing that casino.  Those bills are being fast-tracked by the anti-Native nativists in the Senate.

- Natural Resources and Transportation will meet in SHR109 on Monday upon adjournment of the Rules meeting.  Not many bills on the agenda, but they will consider the first executive nominations of the session.  Most of the nominees are big R contributors.

- Education will meet in SHR3 on Monday upon adjournment of Rules.  Lowlights:  SB1116, Sen. Andy Biggs bid to make permanent "displaced pupils choice grants" (AKA "private school vouchers") and SB1053 and SB1055, Sen. Linda Gray's bills relating to "character education" ("character" is something that cost a former Arizona Treasurer his job).

- Banking and Insurance will meet in SHR3 on Tuesday at 2 p.m.  One bill on the agenda thus far:  SB1122, Sen. Nancy Barto's move to make "health care sharing ministries" tax exempt.

- Appropriations will meet in SHR109 on Tuesday at 2 p.m.  No bills on the agenda.  Budget hearings for "statewide debt, community colleges, and Department of Health Services."

- Public Safety and Human Services will meet in SHR3 on Wednesday at 9 a.m.  Likely lowight: SB1018, a measure that further privatizes certain Department of Corrections operations (in this case, prisoner transition services).

- Government Reform will meet in SHR1 on Wednesday at 9 a.m.  Interesting bill:  SB1165, a measure from Sen. Steve Yarbrough, to bar municipalities from contracting with third parties to audit sales tax transactions or for the "collection, administration or processing" of such transactions (referred to in the bill as "transaction privilege" taxes).

- Water, Land Use, and Rural Development will meet in SHR3 on Wednesday at 2 p.m.  Agenda looks quiet so far.

- Healthcare and Medical Liability Reform will meet in SHR1 on Wednesday at 2 p.m.  Short agenda.  The one interesting bill looks to be SB1176, innocuously titled "medical board: omnibus."  Among other things, it would serve to reduce public disclosure of the misdeeds of medical professionals.

- Economic Development and Jobs Creation will meet in SHR109 on Wednesday at 2 p.m.  Looks quiet so far - one bill, one executive nomination, one presentation (from a business lobbying group, the National Federation of Independent Business - Arizona..

- Finance will meet in SHR1 on Thursday at 9 a.m.  A few executive nominations and some tax- and pension-related bills, most of which I do NOT understand well enough to summarize here.  Visit the legislature's "Bill Info" page if you want to look up one or more of them.

- Border Security, Federalism, and States Sovereignty will meet in SHR109 on Thursday at 9 a.m.  This one is Sen. Sylvia Allen's committee, so it isn't surprising that while the agenda is a short one, it's colorful.  They'll start with a "presentation" from a group of anti-immigration ranchers from southern AZ, follow with consideration of SB1178, a Tenth Amendment/"federal government go away!" bill and SCR1006, a resolution supporting the aforementioned ranchers' "border security" plan (a "plan" that includes militarizing the border and roundups of immigrants). 

Nothing on the agenda indicates that the assemblage will break into a chorus of the Horst Wessel song, but with this crew, ear plugs and a barf bag might be necessary.

- Various subcommittees of Appropriations will hold budget hearings Friday morning at 9 a.m.  Agendas here, here, and here.


On the House side -

- Rules will meet in HHR4 on Monday at 1 p.m.  As with its Senate counterpart above, the agenda is long and boring, with the most contentious bills likely to be the House versions of the anti-tribal casino bills.

- Ways and Means will meet in HHR1 on Monday at 2 p.m.  As with its Senate counterpart above (Senate Finance Committee), I don't understand most of the bills.  Here however, most of the bills have been spawned by Rep. Jack Harper, and anything with his name on it is presumed to be a bad bill.  However, one I *do* understand is Harper's HCR2006, a bill to radically raise the amount raise the amount of business property (equipment, etc.) exempted from taxation from the current $50K to "an amount equal to the earnings per employee of twenty workers in this state according to a designated national measure of earnings per employee adjusted annually as provided by law."  The most current numbers for per capita income in Arizona (not an exact language match with the measure, but it will do for this post):
 
$34,335. 

20 times that number: $686,700, or an increase of almost 1300%.   The real number would almost certainly be higher because I'm sure the Rs would find a "measure" that inflated employee earnings as much as possible.

- Energy and Natural Resources will meet in HHR4 on Monday at 2 p.m.  Quiet so far.

- Education will meet in HHR3 on Monday at 2 p.m or upon adjournment of the House floor session.  On the agenda:  HB2197, Rep. Debbie Lesko's bill to bar the establishment or operation of a charter school "in an age restricted community that is located in unorganized territory."  It has an emergency clause to provide for immediate enactment.

- Banking and Insurance will meet in HHR2 on Monday at 2 p.m.  Looks quiet so far - a couple of presentations, and a few bill that I mostly don't understand.

- Government will meet in HHR4 on Tuesday at 2 p.m.  Lowlight:  HB2153, Rep. Steve Montenegro's move to bar municipalities and counties from passing any new ordinances to require that newly-constructed homes have fire sprinklers.  Ordinances that were enacted before December 31, 2009 would stand, however.


- Environment will meet in HHR5 on Tuesday at 2 p.m.  Presentations only, so far.
 
- Employment and Regulatory Affairs will meet in HHR3 on Tuesday at 2 p.m.  Looks relatively quiet, though the one bill on the agenda is the subject of the first strike-everything amendment of the session.  It's a "same subject" amendment and doesn't look to be greatly different than the original bill.
 
- Higher Education, Innovation, and Reform will meet in HHR2 on Wednesday at 9 a.m. Quiet so far.
 
- Health and Human Services will meet in HHR4 on Wednesday at 9:45 a.m.  Looks pretty quiet so far.
 
- Commerce will meet in HHR5 on Wednesday at 10 a.m.  On the agenda:  Rep. John Kavanagh's HB2102, adding "fingerprint clearance card" to the list of documents that cannot be issued to/for people who cannot definitively prove their immigration status.
 
- Appropriations will meet in HHR1 on Wednesday at 2 p.m.  Budget hearings only, so far.
 
- Transportation will meet in HHR3 on Thursday at 9 a.m.  Lowlight:  HB2288, Rep. Jeff Dial's scheme to force the state's aiports to abandon the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) and totally privatize their security and screening operations.
 
There once was an era in American history where airport security was left to the tender mercies of the profit-driven, low-bidder-seeking corporate mentality. 
 
That era ended on September 11, 2001.
 
- Technology and Infrastructure will meet in HHR1 on Thursday at 9 a.m.  Only bill on the agenda:  HB2502, Rep. Carl Seel's proposal to mandate that if a public agency advertises some sort of program for the public, the agency must declare the source of its funding.
 
- Judiciary will meet in HHR4 on Thursday at 9 a.m.  Only bill on the agenda:  HB2141, a bill from Rep. Jack Harper relating to county realignment.  Not sure what he's up to with this one, but it's Jack Harper - his proposals are presumed bad.
 
- Agriculture and Water will meet in HHR5 on Thursday at 9 a.m.  Looks quiet so far. 
 
 
Other events at or around the Capitol this week:
 
- It's "National School Choice Week" so in addition to a number of other events, on Wednesday, the American Federation for Children will hold a legislators-only luncheon and movie showing at the Associated General Contractors Building, 1825 W. Adams.
 
That's a nice sounding name for an organization, but it is dedicated to undermining public education systems by lobbying legislators to siphon more and more money away from publc ed to private schools through vouchers.
 
- The only event on the Governor's public schedule for the coming week is a press conference on Monday with a "special announcement regarding education reform."
 
Since the unwritten rules of "political theater" usually call for such events to take place among students in a school and this one will be on the 2nd floor of the Capitol's Executive Tower, it's likely that the about-to-be-proposed "reform" isn't one that is likely to benefit students or schools.
 
Of course, I'm a cynic of long standing. :)
 
- Other events can also be found here, courtesy the Arizona Capitol Times.
 
Later...

Sunday, January 16, 2011

The coming week: legislative edition

Welcome to the first schedule post of 2011...

All information gathered from the website of the Arizona Legislature and subject to change without notice.

Note:  An "HHR" prefix indicates that the meeting place is in a hearing room in the House building, and an "SHR" prefix indicates a hearing room in the Senate building.

At the legislature this week, no committee hearings are scheduled for Monday, probably due to it being the legal holiday to mark the birthday of Martin Luther King, Jr.

On the House side of the quad this week -

- Education will meet Tuesday at 8:30 a.m. in HHR3.  Housekeeping meeting with nothing significant on the agenda at this time.

- Joint Appropriations will meet Tuesday at ~9:15 a.m. in HHR1.  They will receive a presentation on the Governor's budget proposal.  Probably the week's most significant committee hearing.

- Government will meet Tuesday at 2 p.m. in HHR4.  Scheduled highlights include HB2077, requiring federal agencies to register with a county's sheriff and make a payment to said sheriff before operating in that county.

- Environment will meet Tuesday at 2 p.m. in HHR5.  No bills scheduled for hearing.  They will receive presentations from the Arizona Department of Environmental Quality, County Supervisors Association, Maricopa County, Pima County, Pinal County, Maricopa Association of Governments, and Pima Association of Governments.

- Employment and Regulatory Affairs will meet Tuesday at 2 p.m in HHR3.  On the agenda:  consideration of HB2025, a special assessment to help bring the state's unemployment insurance fund out of the red, and a presentation from the administrator of the state's primary public employee pension funds.

- Military Affairs and Public Safety will meet Wednesday at 9 a.m. in HHR3.  Presentations from Davis-Monthan AFB, Department of Public Safety, and Department of Veterans' Services.

- Higher Education, Innovation, and Reform will meet Wednesday at 9 a.m. in HHR2.  Presentations from Drs. Michael Crow (President of ASU), Robert Shelton (U of A), John Haeger (NAU) and Tom Anderes (Board of Regents).

- Commerce will meet on Wednesday at 9 a.m. in HHR5.  Short, discussion-only, agenda, and none of the bills on it look particularly bad.

- Health and Human Services will meet Wednesday at 10 a.m. in HHR4.  Short agenda, none of the bills currently on it look particularly bad.

- Appropriations will meet on Wednesday at 2 p.m. in HHR1.  Budget presentations from the Department of Corrections and School Facilities Board/Statewide Debt.  One bill on the agenda:  HB2016, removing a lot of budget-related reports currently required by law.

- Transportation will meet Thursday at 9 a.m. in HHR3.  No bills on the agenda currently, just a presentation from the Arizona Department of Transportation.

- Technology and Infrastructure will meet Thursday at 9 a.m. in HHR1.  Housekeeping meeting.

- Agriculture and Water will meet Thursday at 9 a.m. in HHR5.  Presentations from Arizona Farm Bureau, Arizona Horse Council, and Arizona State Land Department.

- Judiciary will meet Thursday at 10 a.m. in HHR4.  Housekeeping meeting.

- Ways and Means will meet on Thursday at 2 p.m. in HHR1.  On the agenda: HB2008, relating to internal revenue code conformity (I don't understand the language of this one, and it's from Jack Harper, who's *never* been known for introducing clean, "good governance" bills, so this one may merit a close eye); HB2069, relating to "corporate income tax; sales factor"; and HCR2006, raising the business personal property tax exemption amount from $50K to "an amount equal to the earnings per employee of twenty workers in this state according to a designated national measure of earnings per employee adjusted annually as provided by law."  Better known as a "return on investment" proposal for the big businesses who contributed to various Republican campaigns this past cycle.


...On the Senate side -

Veterans' and Military Affairs will meet Tuesday at 8:30 a.m. in SHR3.  Only one measure on the agenda, and it should be non-controversial: SCR1009, honoring Hopi Code Talkers.

- Joint Appropriations will meet on Tuesday at ~9:15 a.m. in HHR1.  They will receive a presentation on the Governor's budget proposal.  Probably the week's most significant committee hearing.



- Banking and Insurance will meet on Tuesday at 2 p.m. in SHR3.  Only bill on the agenda: SB1102, making changes to law to continue/complete the privatization of the state's Worker's Compensation Fund.

- Appropriations will meet Tuesday at 2 p.m. in SHR109.  Budget presentations from the Department of Corrections and School Facilities Board/Statewide Debt.

- Public Safety and Human Services will meet Wednesday at 9 a.m. in SHR3.  Seven bills on the agenda that didn't look to bad  upon a cursory examination.

- Governrment Reform will meet Wednesday at 9 a.m. in SHR1.  Housekeeping meeting.

- Commerce and Energy will meet Wednesday at 9 a.m. in SHR109.  Presentations from SRP and APS and consideration of SB1086, banning the use of fake ID by minors to purchase tobacco products and prohibiting the manufacture, sale or distribution of "blunt wraps," defined in the bill as "an individual tobacco wrapper, also known as a wrap or roll-your-own cigar wrap, which is made wholly or in part from tobacco, including reconstituted tobacco, whether in the form of tobacco leaf, sheet or tube, if the wrap is designed to be offered to or purchased by a consumer.”



- Water, Land Use, and Rural Development will meet Wednesday at 2 p.m. in SHR3.  Presentations by Central Arizona Water Conservation District and Natural Resource Conservation Districts.

- Healthcare and Medical Liability Reform will meet Wednesday at 2 p.m. in SHR1.  A few items on the agenda.  One interesting one:  SB1122, making "health care sharing ministries" tax exempt.  This one is from Nancy Barto, who is vehemently opposed to making health care more accessible to the general public, but apparently if one is devout enough...?

- Economic Development and Jobs Creation will meet Wednesday at 2 p.m. in SHR109.  Presentations on ecconomic development from Arizona State University, Curis, AECOM, Arizona's Workers' Compensation System.

- Finance will meet on Thursday at 9 a.m. in SHR1.  A number of technical bills on the agenda that I don't completely understand.

- Border Security, Federalism and States Sovereignty will meet on Thursday at 9 a.m. in SHR109.  Let the nativist looniness begin.  Presentations from the Cochise County Sheriff, Pinal County Sheriff, US Border Patrol, and a civilian representative of the Arizona Department of Public Safety's GITEM Task Force (gang task force).  Consideration of SB1046 ("juvenile corrections; discharge; ICE detainers"); SB1136 (a move to block a Tohono O'odham resort in the West Valley); and SR1001 (a resolution declaring that a casino in the West Valley is a "state sovereignty" issue and they will fight against it with every taxpayer dollar at their disposal [OK, they didn't use the language in that last part.  But it's what they mean.])

Judiciary will meet Thursday upon adjournment of the Senate floor session in SHR1.  Let the ugly begin.  The lowlights include consideration of SB1117, allowing the legislature, independent of the executive branch (i.e. - the Governor and AG), to "direct counsel" to appear in state or federal court on behalf of the respective chambers of the lege to protect last year's SB1070 from legal challenges and SCR1010, a proposed amendment to the Arizona Constitution that would bar Arizona courts from considering "the legal precepts of other nations or cultures" when rendering their decisions.  Many of the other bills on the agenda have a high potential for ideologically-based mischief, too.

- On Friday at 9 a.m., the three subcommitteesof the Appropriations Committee will hold budget hearings for various agencies and departments.  Agendas here, here, and here.


Other events posted for the Capitol (and environs) this week:

Tuesday is the Annual Tribal Day at the Legislature (a number of events taking place all day)

Wednesday, the Nucleus Club will host Greg Stanton, a member of the Phoenix City Council and candidate for mayor.

Saturday, both the Arizona Democratic Party (9 a.m - 6 p.m., Wyndham Phoenix) and the Arizona Republican Party (8:30 a.m. -  3 p.m., Church of the Nations, Phoenix) will hold their biennial reorganization meetings.





 

Friday, October 22, 2010

It's getting Ugly out there...

As we approach Election Day, any Republican facade of civility is sloughing off in the heat of the races.

Witness recent developments:

- A conservative astroturf group, "Latinos for Reform" released a Spanish-language TV spot that attempted to suppress Latino voter turnout...

- GOP/tea party operatives are running voter suppression efforts in Illinois, Texas, Wisconsin, and elsewhere that are specifically targeted at Democratic-leaning minority communities...

- Arizona State Senator Russell Pearce (R-National Alliance) has announced his latest effort to inflict his vision of ethnic purity on America - he's targeting the 14th Amendment and its provision that grants citizenship to children born in the USA.

It won't succeed, and I suspect Pearce knows that, but it keeps the conversation on a topic that the Rs think they can win on - demonization of the "other" - and may provide the fading Jan Brewer an SB1070-like bump at the polls.

- A Pearce clone in Florida, State Rep. William Snyder, has proposed a version of the infamous SB1070, one that carves out an exemption for white people in the form of a presumption that anyone from Canada or a "visa waiver" country is in the U.S. legally. 

The vast majority of the countries that are part of the visa waiver program are European; none are Latin American.

- Then just yesterday, Congressman Raul Grijalva's Tucson office was shut down and evacuated after someone sent it a swastika-covered package containing a toxic substance.

Lies, hatred, threats of violence - the Rs are pulling out all the stops this year, and the only way to stop them is to urge your family, friends, and neighbors to stand strong for their community against the Republicans, their contempt for civility, and their fear-mongering.

Everybody who can vote, *should,* and they should be able to exercise their rights free from intimidation and fraudulent attempts to stifle their participation America's political process.


Note:  The Arizona Humanities Council will present a screening of the documentary 9500 Liberty on Tuesday evening at the Arizona Historical Society Museum in Tempe.  9500 Liberty covers the effects (and failure) of an SB1070-like law in Prince William County, Virginia.

Details:

Tuesday, October 26, 2010


6:00-8:00 pm

Arizona Historical Society Museum

1300 N. College Avenue

Tempe, AZ 85281
 
 
Later...

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Candidate Debates for the week ending October 3, 2010

Most of the following info is from the Clean Elections website...

No CE-sponsored debates for statewide candidates this week.


Legislative debates -

LD4
Tuesday, September 28, 2010
6:00 PM
Windmill Suites at Sun City West
12545 W Bell Road
Surprise, AZ 85374

LD29
Tuesday, September 28, 2010
6:00 PM
Pima Community College District Office
Community Room
4905 E Broadway
Tucson, AZ



LD24

Wednesday, September 29, 2010
6:00 PM
Hampton Inn & Suites
600 E 16th Street
Yuma, AZ 85365

LD30
September 30, 2010
6:00 PM
Pima Community College
East Campus Community Room
8181 E Irvington
Tucson, AZ



LD12

Thursday, September 30, 2010
6:00 PM
Hampton Inn and Suite
2000 N Litchfield Road
Goodyear, AZ 85395


Scottsdale City Council candidate debate:

Arizona Republic City Council Debates
Monday, September 27, 2010
6:00 p.m.

City Hall Kiva Forum
3939 N. Drinkwater Blvd.

And the big one of the week, even though it will take place on Sunday, September 26 (before the "week" in this post begins):

U.S. Senate debate. featuring Rodney Glassman, Democratic nominee, and John McCain, Republican incumbent

6 p.m.
Broadcast on KTVK (Phoenix channel 3) and KTTU (Tucson channel 18), carried on cable in Yuma, and livestreamed on AZFamily.com

Should be fun, though probably not quite as popcorn-worthy as the debate between McCain and Hayworth in the R primary.

Later...

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Debates for the week of September 20, 2010

Most info from the website of the Citizens Clean Elections Commission.

Statewide candidates:

Secretary of State
September 22, 2010

7:00 PM - 7:30 PM
Televised on KAET
Horizon Channel 8


Legislative candidates:

LD18
Monday, September 20, 2010

6:00 PM
Phoenix Mesa Marriott Hotel
200 N Centennial Way
Mesa, AZ 85201


LD3
Tuesday, September 21, 2010

6:00 PM
Bullhead Area Chamber of Commerce Conference Center
1251 Highway 95
Bullhead City, AZ 86429

LD8
September 21, 2010

6:30 PM
Kerr Cultural Center
6110 N Scottsdale Rd
Scottsdale, AZ 85253

 
LD2
Wednesday, September 22, 2010

6:00 PM
Woodlands Radisson Hotel
1175 W Route 66
Flagstaff, AZ 86001


LD7
Thursday, September 23, 2010

6:00 PM
Appaloosa Library
City of Scottsdale
7377 E Silverstone Rd
Scottsdale, AZ 85255


Scottsdale City Council candidate forum (complete community meeting notice here):

Brown Avenue Merchants City Council Debates
Monday, September 20, 2010
6:00 p.m.

City Hall Kiva Forum
3939 N. Drinkwater Blvd.



Later...

Saturday, September 11, 2010

This week's debate/event schedule

Most of this info is from the website of the Citizens Clean Elections Commission.  They seem to be the only group that Republican candidates will pay attention to when they come calling regarding debates this year.  Maybe it has something to do with legal requirements for campaign funding.

Not that Carl Seel (R - LD6 ) cares about minor details like that, but more on that in the near future...

On to the list of debates -

Statewide race:

Superintendent of Public Instruction
Wednesday, September 15, 2010
7:00 PM - 7:30 PM
Televised on KAET
Horizon Channel 8

 
Legislative races:
 
LD11
Monday, September 13, 2010
6:00 PM
Embassy Suite Paradise Valley
4415 E Paradise Village Parkway South
Phoenix, AZ 85032


LD10
Tuesday, September 14, 2010

6:30pm
ASU West Campus, La Sala Ballroom
4701 W Thunderbird Rd
Glendale, AZ 85306

LD19
Tuesday, September 14, 2010

6:00 PM
Country Inn and Suites
6650 E Superstition Springs Blvd
Mesa, AZ 85206

LD28
Tuesday, September 14, 2010

6:00 PM
Pima Community College District Office
Community Room
4905 E Broadway
Tucson, AZ



LD23
Wednesday, September 15, 2010

6:00 PM
Holiday Inn Casa Grande
777 N Pinal Ave
Casa Grande, AZ 85122



LD9
Thursday, September 16, 2010
6:00 PM
Library
Thunderbird School of Global Management
1 Global Place
Glendale, AZ 85306


LD20
Friday, September 17, 2010

6:30 PM
ASU Research Park, Marco Technology Works Building
Room FDC #1408
7700 S River Parkway
Tempe, AZ 85284


Other events:

- Penny Kotterman, Democratic nominee for Superintendent of Public Instruction, has a calendar entry on her website for "ASA Event" on Monday morning, 8:30 a.m., at Metro Tech High School, an entry that includes a "forum" component.  Not sure what it is about, since "ASA" could refer to both "Arizona School Administrators" and "Arizona Students Association" and both would work for this race and for holding events in a school.  Since the event *is* at a school, it probably isn't open to the public anyway.

- Manny Cruz is running for State Mine Inspector.  Right now, no events are listed on the calendar section of his website for this week.  However, if his campaign updates the website or sends a list of events to me, I'll update this post.

- On Wednesday, September 15, a group called "Scottsdale Residents and Business Owners for Open, Clean and Efficient Government" will be holding a forum for candidates for Scottsdale City Council at 11 a.m. in the City Hall Kiva.  The group is run for Mayor Jim Lane by R. Lamar Whitmer and is expected to craft an event that favors Lane's selected candidates.  The group was formed on August 5, 2010 as a $500 Exemption Committee by Whitmer.

- On Thursday, September 16, the Community Council of Scottsdale will hold a forum for Scottsdale City Council candidates in the Granite Reef Senior Center from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.

Updates as they become available (will add without noting the edits)...

Wednesday, September 08, 2010

Attorney General Debate Tonight

From the Arizona Capitol Times -
A debate scheduled Wednesday evening between candidates for state attorney general is still on though it no longer is sponsored by the state’s public campaign finance system.
Since both candidates, Democrat Felecia Rotellini and Republican Tom Horne, are utilizing "traditional" campaign financing, the debate isn't sponsored by the Citizens Clean Elections Commission.  Hence the reason that I missed this one when in the post earlier this week listing debates and events (it wasn't on CE's list of debates.)

The debate will air at 7 tonight on KAET (PBS 8).

Saturday, September 04, 2010

For the week of September 6, 2010: Upcoming debates

From the website of the Citizens Clean Elections Commission (note: there aren't any CCEC debates for statewide candidates scheuled for this week) -

District 06

September 07, 2010
Candidate Debate
6:00 PM
Hilton Garden Inn
1940 E Pinnacle Peak Rd
Phoenix, AZ 85027


District 16

September 08, 2010
Candidate Debate
6:30 PM
ASU Mercado
Room C145
502 E Monroe Street
Phoenix, AZ 85004



District 15

September 09, 2010
Candidate Debate
6:00 PM
Radisson City Central
3600 N 2nd Avenue
Phoenix, AZ 85013


District 27

September 09, 2010
Candidate Debate
6:00 PM
Pima Community College
West Campus Student Lounge
2202 W Anklam Rd
Tucson, AZ


And for a non-Clean Elections legislative debate

District 8

September 7. 2010
Scottsdale Republic candidate debate
6:00 p.m.
City Hall Kiva
3939 N. Drinkwater Blvd.
Scottsdale, AZ


And for a non-legislative debate

Scottsdale City Council candidate forum
McDowell Sonoran Conservancy
September 8, 2010
7:00 p.m.
Granite Reef Senior Center
1700 N. Granite Reef Rd.
Scottsdale, AZ

Later...

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

It's Up To Me AZ: A Day of Civic Action

On Thursday, September 23, a group of civic organizations, including Arizona Town Hall, the Arizona Foundation for Women, Center for the Future of Arizona, Girl Scouts - Arizona Cactus Pine Council, and The OʼConnor House, will hold an all-day event at the Wyndham in Phoenix.  The goal of the event is to bring together Arizonans interested in working to improve Arizona through civil discourse and civic engagement.

The day's activities begin at 7:30 a.m. and continue until 8:30 p.m. 

They include:

Who Votes? Who Helps? Who Speaks for Arizona?  at 7:30 a.m.

The Status of Women in Arizona: A Special Report and Call to Action by the Arizona Foundation for Women at 9:15 a.m.

Arizona Town Hall Fall Luncheon, activities starting at 10:30 a.m., lunch at noon.

It’s Up To Me AZ: The Action Starts Now starting at 1:45 p.m.

Inspiration & Action for AZ, reception and dinner starting at 5:30 p.m.


Sign up and get more info here.  Interested folks can sign up for the entire day's slate ($200) or can pick events a la carte (as low as $free). 

While I haven't participated in any events put on by any of these particular organizations, I have been part of the last two sessions put together by Project Civil Discourse (a May discussion of the sales tax question that was on the ballot then, and one this month on immigration).  The discussions were perceptive and yes, heartening.  If only because while we didn't all agree on the issues under discussion, we could *talk* and not *yell.*

After covering the lege for years, that was definitely refreshing. :)

Anyway, it's worth a look.

Later!

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Goddard challenges Brewer to series of debates...

...but Brewer says "Nope.  Only the one that I am legally obligated to attend."*

*That's not a real quote, but it's the real meaning of the press release that I'll quote later in this post...

Earlier today, Terry Goddard, Arizona's Attorney General and Democratic candidate for Governor, challenged unelected incumbent Jan Brewer to a series of debates. 

From his letter to the Brewer campaign  (with minor adjustments to the format for readability here) -
The people of Arizona deserve the opportunity to see for themselves which candidate has the vision and experience to lead Arizona back to prosperity.

I propose the following topics and host communities. Of course, I will work with your schedule to maximize this important opportunity for Arizona:

Balancing Arizona’s Budget - Tucson

Public Safety and Protecting Arizona - Kingman

Immigration and Securing Arizona’s Border - Sierra Vista

Jobs for Arizona - Yuma

Creating a World Class System for Education in AZ - Phoenix

Tourism, Energy, the Environment and Reviving Rural AZ - Flagstaff
Her response, from a emailed press release -
"Terry Goddard is Obama's Arizona apostle.

"Governor Brewer will participate in the televised debate sponsored by the Clean Elections Commission on September 1st. The scheduling of any possible future debates will be revisited after that time. In the meantime, we anticipate that Mr. Goddard will use his campaign funds to try to redefine 30-year record of failure. We look forward to seeing his TV commercials in the weeks to come."
Yeah, I'm biased, but one of the things that struck me is that the Brewer campaign doesn't understand the difference between "challenging" (which is what Goddard did , respectfully [read the linked letter]) and "insulting" (the Brewer response.)

I didn't actually expect her to go for six debates, especially the one in Kingman, location of the privately-operated prison that housed the recently-escaped murderers, but to be so openly contemptuous of her adversary and the people of Arizona?  I most definitely did not expect that.

Oh, and in case someone thinks that Brewer was being nice when she deigned to agree to the Clean Elections forum (full schedule here), you should remember that she *has* to appear at that one.  It's a requirement for those candidates who accept Clean Elections funding.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Scottsdale candidate forums

Thanks go out to the AZ Republic for the heads-up on these...

The next one will be on Monday and it will involve the Republicans running for the two House seats in LD8.
Arizona Republic Debate for State House

Date: Monday, August 2, 2010
Time: 6 p.m.
Location: CityCable 11 Studio (cannot accommodate audience)
Broadcast LIVE on CityCable Channel 11
Also watch it LIVE online
Cost: n/a
Event Description: Arizona Republic Debate for State House
There will be a few forums in September.

The first of those will be on Monday, September 20 in the City Hall Kiva at 6 p.m.  That one is sponsored by the Brown Avenue Merchant's Association.

On Tuesday, September 21, the Citizens Clean Elections Commission will hold its LD8 general election candidate forum at the Kerr Cultural Center, 6110 N. Scottsdale Rd., Scottdale 85253

On Monday, September 27, the Arizona Republic is sponsoring a forum to be held in the studios of CityCable11 (no room for an audience, but it will be televised.)

A week after that, October 4, the Scottsdale Area Association of Realtors will hold their forum for City Council candidates, in the City Hall Kiva.


Later...

Friday, July 16, 2010

Arts Education forum for State Superintendent candidates

The Arizona Citizens for the Arts and the Arizona Alliance for Arts Education will be presenting a forum with/for all five candidates for State Superintendent of Public Education (Ds: Penny Kotterman and Jason Williams; Rs: Beth Price, Margaret Dugan, and John Huppenthal) .

From the announcement -
All Candidates for the post have been invited to the event where they will answer a series of questions related to the Arizona Arts Standards, development of arts education curriculum for students and their commitment to provide access to quality arts education in Arizona schools.
Date:  Thursday, July 29, 2010
Time: 5:30p.m. - 7:30 p.m.
Place: Musical Instrument Museum
           4725 E. Mayo Blvd.

           Phoenix, AZ 85050
 
The forum is free and open to the public.  Register here.
 
According to this AZCentral.com piece, as of yesterday, all five candidates have pledged to be there, though that is subject to change without notice.

Meet and greet LD1 candidates to discuss education issues

Posting, with permission, an email from a regular reader in Sedona Karen McClelland, a Sedona Oak Creek School Board member -
ATTENTION ALL EDUCATION ADVOCATES

DISCUSS EDUCATION ISSUES WITH ALL THE STATE LEGISLATIVE CANDIDATES

The budget news for Arizona for next year is still bleak. All of our local schools have reduced budgets for next year. Most laid off staff members and cut programs. We are hearing that we may face budgets cuts during the upcoming school year even before the budget for 2011-2012 is discussed.

It is more vital than ever that we let our state legislature know that we view Education as a TOP PRIORITY for the state. preserving and improving our public education system is vital for the future of Arizona's economy. We need to be sure sure that ALL our elected officials view education as an essential INVESTMENT in our future and NOT as an expense.

Please come and let all the candidates for State Legislature and State Senate in LD1 hear your concerns.

I am hosting informal houseparties for each candidate. These are not fundraising events and I hope that Republicans, Democrats, parents, community members, teacher and board members attend each meeting. The meetings will be at my home in the Village of Oak Creek, Sedona .

I do need RSVPs.

Please call me at 284-0001 or email me at klm@esedona.net and I will send you the directions.

The meeting dates are:

Monday, July 26 4 p.m. Lindsay Bell, Democratic Candidate for State Legislature

Wednesday, August 11 4 p.m. Noel Campbell. Republican Candidate for State Legislature

Wednesday, August 18 4 p.m. Karen Fann . Republican Candidate for State Legislature

Thursday, August 26 4p.m. Senator Steve Pierce, Republican Candidate for State Senate


Rep. Andy Tobin , Republican candidate for State Legislature will also be here in mid August and

Bob Donahue, Democratic Candidate for State Senate will be here the first week in September. We are still finalizing dates.

 Karen McClelland, Vice-President Sedona Oak Creek School Board
Yavapai County Director, Arizona School Board Association
**and Candidate for re-election to Sedona Oak Creek School Board for a third term!**
Later...