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BISBEE WIRE #78/around town/protect your info/complete voting info/ballot props in detail

editor: fred miller           September 4, 2024              #78/September/24

Hello,



Good grief! The talking heads masquerading as 'opinion' writers are just wagging their tongues to beat the heat about Kamala Harris and Tim Walz's interview on CNN. Oh, they didn't say this!They didn't say that. Oh my gosh they should've said this. They should've said that. She didn't hurt herself, but she didn't help herself! These people are getting paid for their insipid pathetic comments? No wonder journalism is in trouble!



Got that off my chest! As you see below, I've outlined all the 13 propositions that are going to be on the ballot. The Republicans in the  legislature, despite their many paid vacations, couldn't manage to pass several pieces of legislation. So they have decided to let the people decide! Yeah, right. In addition to most of this stop being really crap legislation like restricting the initiative proces-134 &136, giving a handout to restaurant chains-138, enabling racial profiling-314


(opposed by mostpolice agencies, and  they have done is passed on more costs to us long suffering taxpayers in the form of a ballot that's now two pages instead of one as well as numerous instances of their paid time explaining what they've done. It's really disgusting. There is one YES vote/319/abortion as you'll see below, but all the rest vote NO emphatically.



My totally biased cheat sheet guide to voting will be ready before early voting begins in  early October. There's not much time so I hope you can do whatever you can do, however you can do it, whenever you can do it to defeat, the increasingly delusional, donald trump and his woman hating running mate.



Here is a little Giftie from me to you courtesy of the New York Times. In September, you can go to the this URL and look at/download any food recipe in on their site. No subscription needed.



fred

................​AROUND TOWN................


ARTEMIZIA OPENING


Join local photographer David Rose for his opening 


Saturday September 14th from 1-4pm

Artemizia Foundation’s Gallery   818 Tombstone


Exhibit shows 9/14 through 10/20


.....


BISBEE MEDIA MENTIONS

Best historical small town

https://www.newsweek.com/readerschoice/best-historical-small-town?fbclid=IwY2xjawE0maFleHRuA2FlbQIxMQABHZyktx9vctERq9_kCvsk7qDpnCIAjfO2yMc-gQob5eMoljm0SEfbjG_3cA_aem_IbV58Jf3NwYmnaVUeaTf2A

AZHighways

https://www.arizonahighways.com/blog/debunking-bisbee-urban-legend?fbclid=IwY2xjawE6AnhleHRuA2FlbQIxMQABHcceRz298p_5XCwKgCjgO90R3WwfcIMCfsf8E2Yylf_hvyzO9K-QbRC5OQ_aem_d43lg86O0_I-jHtS9Fkd9Q

The Library

https://headtopics.com/us/booking-a-spot-at-the-top-copper-queen-library-receives-58179770

The Deportation

https://www.azcentral.com/story/opinion/op-ed/ej-montini/2024/08/30/labor-day-worker-rights-attack-trump-project-2025/75014656007/

The Town

https://www.msn.com/en-us/travel/tripideas/7-small-towns-that-are-perfect-dupes-for-sedona/ar-BB1lc1TO?ocid=weather-verthp-feeds&apiversion=v2&noservercache=

The Peaches (wtf? in havana times?)

https://havanatimes.org/photo-of-the-day/peach-orgy-bisbee-arizona-usa-photo-of-the-day/


...............

COMING EVENTS


(from This Week in Bisbee)


TWIB Fest September 21 – This Week in Bisbee all-day music festival at the Jonquil Hotel featuring  Bisbee musicians, vendors, tacos, and more TBA


Bisbee Plein Air Festival Oct 10 – 13 https://www.centralschoolproject.org/plein-air-festivalBisbee


1000 stair climb/race October 19 https://www.bisbee1000.org/


B.R.A.T.S. Parade October 24 https://www.facebook.com/BisbeeRollingArt


Mariachi Festival November 2 http://bisbeemariachifestival.com/


Sidepony Express Music Festival November 9 https://www.facebook.com/sideponyexpress


Bisbee Woman’s Club Home Tour and Art, Chairs and More Auction November 29 & 30

 

TECH/PROTECT YOURSELF


Your Social Security number and much of your personal information has likely been hacked. It is some of the ways you can protect yourself.

National Public Data, a dealer of personal background information confirmed that it had lost control of Social Security numbers and other sensitive data Friday, recommending that consumers put fraud alerts on their files at the biggest credit bureaus and keep a close watch on their financial accounts.

First check to see if you were hacked....Two online security companies have put up websites that let you check for free if your Social Security number is part of the stolen store of personal information: One is https://www.npdbreach.com/ from the online privacy company Atlas Privacy; the second is https://npd.pentester.com/ by the Pentester cybersecurity company.

Then, Freeze your credit...A credit freeze blocks any new lines of credit, so a bad actor couldn’t open new cards or accounts in your name. You can initiate a freeze without impacting your credit score. Just visit the websites of the three major credit reporting agencies Equifax, Experian and TransUnion. You might have to scroll down the page or click on one of the menu tabs at the top to find a “manage freeze” or “add a freeze” button. You’ll fill out a form and might get asked to set up an account of verify your identity — it this case go ahead and do so.

and, Turn on two-factor authentication...This is the thing that sends you a text message with a code as you log in. “Two factor” just means you need to authenticate your identity in multiple ways before accessing an account. Turning on two-factor authentication — either when you set up an account or later in the settings — is one of the best and easiest ways to keep accounts secure, according to the Identity Theft Resource Center, a nonprofit that helps consumers deal with fraud. It’s 2024, and we’re not using the same password for multiple websites anymore. Each account you own should have a long, distinct password containing a mix of letters, numbers and special characters.

And...Worried about remembering all those? Get a password manager such as Dashlane or 1Password, which automatically generate secure passwords and autofill them next time you log in.

Delete accounts you don’t use...Don’t just abandon accounts you don’t use any more — go ahead and delete them. It reduces the amount of personal info you have sitting online.

.........EVERYTHING ELSE.........

I'm really proud of the Hotel/Restaurant Employees union, and my former peeps, Local 2 in San Fran! I walked many a picket line with them...Over the busy Labor Day weekend, at least 10,000 unionized front-desk workers, housekeepers and other employees at 24 hotel properties across the country walked off the job on Sunday after failing to come to an agreement in contract negotiations.

The strikes — which as of Sunday afternoon were affecting some Hilton, Hyatt and Marriott hotels, and one Fairmont property, in Boston; San Francisco; Seattle; San Jose, Calif.; Honolulu; Kauai, Hawaii; San Diego; and Greenwich, Conn. — were scheduled to last two to three days in each city, just as many travelers’ holiday weekend plans were in full swing. More hotel workers in other cities could also soon announce strikes.Main issues are the union is demanding a return to daily cleaning of rooms-suspended during the pandemic and not brought back because it saves the hotels money but adds to the burden of the room cleaners, a reduction in the number of rooms to clean per day (currently as man as 17 a day @ 30 minutes a room!, and better pay.

The strike comes as members of the UNITE HERE union at Hilton, Hyatt, Marriott and Omni properties across the country have been engaged in contentious talks since at least May. All of these hotels are profitable. In 2023, Gross operating profit per available room measures the relationship between hotel revenues and expenses and is up 9% over 2022.++++++++++From SOS... in relation to a family wanting the taxpayer funded private voucher program to pay for 3 dune buggies!“Good news for taxpayers, especially the ones who think public money ought to go to public schools. The state is drawing the line at paying for dune buggies. Kayaks, apparently, still are allowed as an acceptable educational expense under the state’s universal school voucher program, as are $900 Lego sets, trampoline sessions, Broadway tickets and espresso machines. But isn’t it nice to know we absolutely are digging in our heels at the ridiculous notion of taxpayers shelling out for dune buggies? So far, anyway.”++++++++++

...............ALL ABOUT THE VOTE...............

Register to vote online


https://servicearizona.com/VoterRegistrationselectLanguageOR


OR


Vote.org will give everyone all the info they need to register and vote — and to double check their registration,


THE CALENDAR

OCTOBER 7....last day for voter registration


OCTOBER.... 9 EARLY VOTING BEGINS


OCTOBER 25.... last day to request a ballot by mail


OCTOBER 29.... last day to mail your ballot back


November 1.... last day to vote early in person


November 5.... ELECTION DAY


 

THE DEBATES  

Schedule


Several outlets will carry various debates but predominantly AZPM 89.1 and channel 6 on your TV.


KBRP's Mike Thornton is trying to arrange a discussion between Anne Carl Democrat and David Stevens Republican about the county recorders' race.


 


US President....ABC


September 10


Kamala Harris


whathisname



US Congress Representative District CD 6 (Bisbee/along the border)


September 18


Daniel Francis Butierez, Sr. 


Raul M. Grijalva



Vice President...CBS


October 1


Tim Walz


James Vance



US Congress Representative District CD 7  (all other Cochise County)


October 7


Kristen Engel    Juan Ciscomani



LD 19 Debate (SV/Cochise cept for Bisbee/Douglas)


October 7


Senate:D- Bob  Karp    David Gowan


D-Gregg Frostrom


Reps  Gail Griffin & Lupe Diaz -

..............RESOURCES...............

 WHAT YOU CAN DO


This is from Michael Moore, (Bowling for Columbine, Roger and me, Michael Moore and Trumpland) what to do for the coming November election.


Locally, if you're inclined to support the Harris/Walz ticket, go here for information how to be involved in a myriad of activities that are happening.


If you are supporting the trump/vance ticket, please stay mum, sit on your ass and don't do a thing.

  1. Get your head straight: WE are the majority! WE are going to win. Trump is OVER.

  2. Go Public! Tell everyone you know that your #1 Mission until November 5th is to Defeat Trump and Elect Kamala and the Coach! Email or text that message to all friends and family in your address book and ask them to join you. 

  3. Make Your Own Homemade Yard Sign Today! The campaign won’t have the official ones ready for 3 weeks! Don’t wait! There’s no time to lose. [Click here to see some of the hundreds of yard signs people have sent me!]

  4. Stop by your local Harris/Dem storefront or HQ and say “Put me to work!” The feedback I’ve received has told me scores of you have already done this. And because the campaign is only a couple weeks old, my thanks to those of you who showed up to find locked doors or no staff. Patience is the key at the beginning. And thanks for keeping two things in mind I’ve always told you: 1) The Democratic Party is not the most organized army on the planet. Think Duck Soup. Democrats are also beset with always expecting to lose and being frightened by conservatives. Getting used to this pandemonium of euphoria can be a little confusing. Which leads me to… 2) Never wait around for the Dems to do something! Just do it yourselves! Appoint yourselves as the campaign! You can do this! You were on Student Council! You were in the Brownies! You ran everything from 1st to 9th grade until the boys got taller, their voices louder, their brains stupider. Reach back into your 7th grade self! 

..............COCHISE COUNTY................

A three-day hearing on whether to dismiss charges against Republicans accused of plotting to overturn the results of the close 2020 presidential race in Arizona concluded Wednesday with prosecutors insisting their case is not politically motivated after defendants argued their alleged conduct was constitutionally protected free speech.


What’s the case about?


Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Bruce Cohen, an appointee of former Democratic Gov. Janet Napolitano, is considering requests from at least a dozen of 18 people indicted in April to dismiss charges of fraud, conspiracy and forgery. Those charged in the case include 11 people who submitted a document falsely claiming Donald Trump defeated Joe Biden in Arizona, two former Trump aides and five lawyers connected to Trump, including Rudy Giuliani.


Trump was not charged but was referred to as an unindicted co-conspirator in the indictment.


The indictment alleges that Giuliani pressured Maricopa County officials and state legislators to change the election results and encouraged Republican electors in the state to vote for Trump in mid-December 2020. The indictment says Giuliani spread false claims of election fraud in Arizona and presided over a downtown Phoenix gathering where he claimed officials made no effort to determine the accuracy of presidential election results.


A trial date of January 5, 2026 has been set.


+++++++++

...............BALLOT PROPOSITIONS................


This summary of ballot propositions is from Citizen Engagement Beyond Voting (CEBV). It is one of the best summaries I've seen. Never fear I'll have a cheat sheet ready for early voting in October.



Prop 133: No 


Summary. Prop 133 asks voters to enshrine Arizona's current partisan primary system into the state Constitution.


By extremists, for extremists. Prop 133 cements into the Constitution a system that's designed to ensure that, at least on the Republican side, only the most extreme candidates can survive. The extremists like it this way; they don't want any challenges to our current system, which allows them to oust principled conservative officials like Stephen Richer or Ken Bennett for failing to toe the MAGA line. 


Blocks positive reform. Forcing Arizona to continue running its primaries this way is designed to make it difficult to ever institute meaningful reforms such as ranked-choice or top-two primary voting. 


Preempts local choice. If voters approve it, Prop 133 would outlaw ranked-choice voting statewide, banning any local attempts to change voting with methods like ranked-choice, and preempting cities from running their own elections the way their residents want. 


Unfair to independent voters. Prop 133 cements a system that requires independent voters (but no one else) to proactively select a partisan ballot in order to vote in primary elections, which is fundamentally unfair to those voters and limits their influence. 


Conflicts with Prop 140. If both Prop 133 and Prop 140 pass in November, whichever one gets the most votes will be enshrined into the state Constitution. We recommend a NO vote on both.



Prop 134: No 


Summary. Prop 134 asks voters to amend the state Constitution to restrict Arizona’s initiative and referendum process by requiring ballot measures to collect signatures from a percentage of voters in each of Arizona’s 30 legislative districts: 10% for initiatives and 15% for a constitutional amendment.


Blocks citizen voices. Prop 134 makes it immensely harder and more expensive for citizens to collect signatures to make their voices heard. Any single district would effectively get veto power over the rest, meaning the most extreme area in the state could veto a measure that has broad support everywhere else. It also would make it simple for well-financed special interest groups to block an initiative they don’t like from ever reaching the ballot. All they would have to do is to pour a ton of money into a single small district, empowering a tiny group of well-funded agitators to harass circulators and discourage citizens from signing. 


Politicians making different rules for the people. The Legislature doesn't need a lawmaker from each district to vote for a bill in order to pass it, just a simple majority. Why create one set of rules for politicians and another for the people? 


Motivated by extremist frustration. The reason why, of course, is that some politicians don't want us making our own laws. Our MAGA lawmaking majority is increasingly frustrated that we're going around them to pass laws they don’t like. In response, they've been trying to enact this policy for four straight years


Part of a national push. Legislators in other red states, like Missouri, Ohio and Idaho, are attempting similar measures — largely in response to citizens going around them to enact laws that extremists had long blocked. 


Anti-democratic and dangerous. The Brennan Center for Justice puts it best: “State officials’ efforts to thwart citizen initiatives do not take shape in isolation. They are part of a larger anti-democracy blueprint — yet another example of state officials trying to manipulate the rules of elections and obstruct the will of voters.”



Prop 135: No 


Summary. Prop 135 asks voters to amend the Arizona Constitution to automatically end the governor's special powers related to an emergency declaration after 30 days unless the Legislature votes to extend them. It would require lawmakers to come back to work, including when out of session, to do this. Fires and floods, which make up the vast majority of emergencies, are excluded.


Endangers federal crisis funding. Arizona currently has 41 open state disaster declarations, which must be in place before we can receive federal funding. The process of addressing a disaster can take decades: assessing damages, signing contracts for repairs, completing the work (including a required audit), and closing the books. Meanwhile, our out-of-touch legislative majority is sticking its head in the sand. Prop 135 would require fractious legislators to get together and argue over whether the drought (a declaration dating to 1999) is real. 


Endangers public safety. Emergency declarations are meant to give the governor the ability to quickly respond to a crisis. Removing this ability puts Arizonans in danger. If our communities are in a true state of emergency, we can't wait around for politicians to stop arguing and reach a consensus. 


Enables minority rule. Currently, lawmakers need a two-thirds majority vote to call a special session. But Prop 135 requires only a one-third majority to do so — that's the same percentage of lawmakers who are election deniers. Do we really want to enable these people to call themselves into special session whenever they wish? 



Prop 136: No


Summary. Prop 136 asks voters to amend the Arizona Constitution to allow anyone to sue to invalidate a citizen initiative, even before it's been placed on the ballot, on grounds that it is not constitutional. If the plaintiffs can get a judge to agree with them, the initiative would be thrown off the ballot, even if enough voters signed to qualify it.


Burdens and targets citizens. With Prop 136, our state lawmakers are asking us to require citizens’ groups to fundraise to defend against potential lawsuits before we, the voters, have even had a chance to weigh in. As one columnist opines, “It’s as if the people running the Legislature haven’t liked the initiative process since 1912, when Arizonans gave women the vote.” 


Different rules for politicians and voters. Prop 136 only impacts citizen-led initiatives, not legislatively referred ones. In other words, politicians are trying to make different rules for us and them — even as they flood the ballot with their own referrals (11 statewide measures for this election cycle alone). 



Prop 137: No 


Summary. Prop 137 asks voters to amend the Constitution to eliminate the current retention process for judges in Arizona's 4 most populous counties, along with all appellate and Supreme Court judges. Lawmakers want us to allow these judges to serve until the mandatory retirement age of 70, instead of facing public retention elections every 4-6 years. Retention questions would go to voters only in the most limited cases, such as if a judge is convicted of a felony. This ends a critical part of the process that former US Supreme Court justice Sandra Day O’Connor championed during her service in the Arizona Senate in the 1970s and actively promoted throughout her life.


Written retroactively. If voters pass Prop 137, the entire judicial retention slate for November would be thrown out, and all the judges would stay in office — even if voters chose not to retain them.  


Shields judges from public accountability. We already know what an unaccountable judiciary looks like: the US Supreme Court. In April, our state Supreme Court ruled to uphold the 1864 near-total abortion ban. Two of the justices who voted to do so, Clint Bolick and Kathryn King, are up for retention this November. If voters approve Prop 137, our votes on whether to retain them would be disregarded. This seeks to insulate judges from meaningful public oversight and shields them from potential consequences for their legal interpretations. 


Courts are already heavily politicized. Former Gov. Doug Ducey politicized the Arizona Supreme Court by getting the Republican-controlled Legislature to increase the number of justices from five to seven  — against all five sitting justices' wishes — and then packed it with his political cronies. The move was part of a broader, decades-long effort by conservatives to reshape the judiciary to counteract national sentiment. Ducey was explicit about the role conservatives should play in the courts: at a Federalist Society event in 2019, Ducey said he told co-chair Leonard Leo that “the Federalist Society has now fixed the judicial branch.”


Gives politicians more power. Prop 137 also would, for the first time ever, inject the Legislature into the process of reviewing judicial performance. It would put two legislators on the panel — selected by the majority party — as well as allow lawmakers to force the commission to look into their complaints.



Prop 138: No 


Summary. Prop 138 asks voters to amend the Arizona Constitution to create a sub-minimum hourly wage for tipped employees that is up to 25% lower than the current minimum wage, as long as they make at least $2/hr over minimum wage once tips are included.


Hurts tipped workers. Current state law allows restaurants to pay tipped workers $3/hr less than minimum wage, assuming that workers will get up to minimum wage with workers' tips. With current minimum wage set at $14.35, that would bring hourly wages down to $10.76 for tipped employees, less than the $11.35 per hour they currently receive. There is no question but that change would financially benefit the restaurants. Unbelievably, the lawmakers behind this measure have dubbed it the "Tipped Workers Protection Act." 


Backed by restaurant industry lobbyists. Prop 138 was pushed through the legislature by lobbyists for the restaurant industry, who also oppose minimum wage and sick leave protections for restaurant staff. The Arizona Restaurant Association even created a fake grassroots organization to lobby for the measure. 


Lawsuits. Opponents of Prop 138 filed a lawsuit claiming that the title of the ballot measure is misleading, as it does nothing to protect tipped workers, making it unconstitutional. A Superior Court judge rejected the suit; an appeal is pending. 



Prop 139, Arizona Abortion Access Act: Yes


Summary. The Arizona Abortion Access Act would restore the rights that generations of women had under Roe v. Wade by amending the state Constitution to guarantee a fundamental right to receive abortion care until the fetus is viable outside the uterus (up to 24 weeks), with exceptions after that point if a health care provider deems it necessary to preserve the life, physical or mental health of their patient.


Protects us from present and future extremists. Embedding this right in the state Constitution will ensure that future legislatures can’t further restrict abortion care without getting voter approval. Given the extreme lengths to which our legislature has gone to keep Arizonans from exercising our reproductive freedom — from the current 15-week ban with no exceptions for rape or incest to waiting periods, mandatory ultrasounds, and mandatory counseling that is designed to change patients' minds — this is critical. 


Reverses bad law. Current Arizona law is draconian. Doctors who provide abortion care beyond 15 weeks for any reason other than to prevent a patient’s death or the “substantial and irreversible impairment” of a major bodily function could be jailed: the class 6 felony penalty carries a potential prison sentence of up to 2 years. Many pregnancy complications are not detectable until around 20 weeks. This law puts doctors in difficult situations, forcing them to weigh prison time and revoked licenses against what they know is best for a patient. 


Improves health outcomes. A large body of evidence shows that restricting reproductive health care results in harmful health outcomes, from a rise in infant deaths to women left on the brink of death because doctors are uncertain about the politically motivated ramifications of needed medical care. Solutions like Prop 139 are essential to keep state lawmakers out of private and personal health care decisions. A doctor should never have to wonder how close to death a woman has to be before they can provide care.  


Lawsuits. Proponents sued to force lawmakers to remove a biased description from the official description used in the statewide ballot pamphlet. The description uses the phrase "unborn human being" instead of the medically correct “fetus.” A judge agreed; however on August 14 the AZ Supreme Court (with Justice Bolick recused and replaced by retired Justice John Pelander) reversed that ruling and will allow the prejudicial descriptor to stay. Chief Justice Ann Scott Timmer and Justice James Beene dissented. Justice Bill Montgomery refused to recuse despite multiple previous public anti-abortion comments.



Prop 140: No


Summary. Prop 140 would amend the Arizona Constitution to open primaries to all voters, regardless of party affiliation. All candidates would appear on the same ballot, which would be sent to all registered voters. The measure also makes a number of smaller changes, such as prohibiting public monies from being spent to run “political party elections.” (This change may also eliminate the role of elected precinct committee members in nominating replacements for legislators who leave office between elections.) 


Lets politicians decide too much. Proponents of Prop 140 say it will "moderate the extremism that’s been stifling progress" on popular issues like school funding, voucher accountability, abortion care, affordable housing, water and environmental policy. But Prop 140 has a fatal flaw: instead of setting a firm number for how many candidates to advance from the primary to the general election, it says our politicians must pass laws deciding how many candidates to advance. 


Putting their thumbs on the scale. In multi-seat races — for instance, the Arizona House of Representatives, with two elected officials per district — Prop 140 allows the legislature to choose between 4 and 7 candidates to advance to the general election. It also allows them to change the number of candidates who advance from the primary “for an office” every six years, which could be twisted to match whichever way they feel the wind is blowing politically at that time. Although a voter ranking is “taken into account” for single-seat elections, there is no requirement that voter rankings must apply to multi-seat elections. 


Gives one person too much power. If state lawmakers fail to act, the Secretary of State gets to choose how this works. Yes, all by him- or herself. That's far too much power to be concentrated in the hands of a single partisan politician. And Prop 140's creators are well aware of this flaw. As the measure's main spokesman said, incredibly: "We don't really care what they do, because anything is better than the current system." We don’t agree.


Too risky. It appears Prop 140 is trying to force our legislature to be sensible. This is a fool’s errand and opens the door to meddling. Over the years, we've seen too much meddling come out of our legislature to give our state lawmakers the benefit of the doubt. Handing the details of our elections over to a legislature — especially one that looks anything like our current one — is a recipe for chaos. 


We recommend a NO vote. CEBV believes the flaws of this measure outweigh its intentions. Though CEBV is open to reform of Arizona's current primary system, Prop 140 – well-intentioned though it may be – has the potential to be considerably worse than what we have now. 


Conflicts with Prop 133. If both Prop 133 and Prop 140 pass in November, whichever one gets the most votes will be enshrined into the state constitution. We recommend a NO vote on both measures. 


Lawsuits. Prop 140 is involved in multiple lawsuits. Two which seek to knock it off the ballot, one challenging signature validity and another on single-subject constitutional grounds, are in the appeals process. A third, also in the appeals process, seeks to force Legislative Council to rewrite its description of the measure. Court challenges must be resolved by August 22 to meet the deadline for preparing the November ballot.



Prop 311: No


Summary. Prop 311 would add a $20 fee to every criminal conviction to give to spouses or children of police officers and first responders (firefighters, fire marshals or inspectors, EMTs, paramedics, tribal police officers) who are killed in the line of duty. If approved, the family of a killed first responder or officer would receive $250,000. 


Duplicative. Prop 311 would add to the considerable sums the families of fallen officers already receive from the federal government, state pension plan, individual agencies that provide life insurance to their members, and private entities like the 100 Club. A federal program already gives $422,035 to the families of police officers who die while working. The Arizona pension system gives a benefit to the surviving family members of police officers, firefighters and corrections officers. Families are eligible for other very generous benefits, including tuition waivers, health insurance, funeral expenses, and other forms of one-time and ongoing assistance. This money would come in addition to those benefits. 


Penalizes defendants. Lawmakers from both parties opposed the measure, saying it was unfair to pile more fees onto the already high surcharges added to the fines of people convicted of criminal offenses, most of which are misdemeanors. Democratic state Sen. Lela Alston said the measure "creates another fine that is disproportionate to certain members of our population.” The measure also boosts criminal penalties for assaulting a first responder. These inflexible and harsh sentencing laws raise incarceration costs for taxpayers, remove judicial discretion and widen racial disparities, while failing to deter crime or increase public safety. 


Help during life, not in death. The time to help officers is while they are alive, by providing fair wages and robust benefits like child care assistance, parental and family leave, tuition reimbursement, and mental health support. An estimated 30 percent of first responders develop behavioral health conditions such as depression and post-traumatic stress disorder. A 2023 bill that provides 911 dispatchers with paid counseling after assisting with a traumatic event is a perfect example of what we should be doing to help first responders. 



Prop 312: No


Summary. Prop 312 would ask voters to require cities and counties to give property owners tax refunds if the county or city “declines to enforce” existing laws that criminalize common activities for people experiencing homelessness. These activities include illegal camping, obstructing public thoroughfares, loitering and panhandling.


Doesn't fix homelessness. The libertarian Goldwater Institute designed Prop 312 to penalize cities financially. This tactic will not fix homelessness or make encampments go away.  


Raises taxes. If Prop 312 becomes law, cities would be forced to give some taxpayers refunds, pushing their tax burden onto the rest of us (who don't get refunds). 


A moot point. Cities have constrained their actions on urban camping because of a 2019 court decision that found crackdowns unconstitutional. (Phoenix, for example, filed a brief saying the decision limited their ability to address encampments.) However, the Supreme Court recently overturned that ruling. Their decision destroys the entire rationale behind Prop 312. Cities like Phoenix can now legally enforce their existing urban camping bans. So why exactly do we need this measure? 



Prop 313: No


Summary. Prop 313 would require those convicted of sex trafficking of minors to spend life in prison with no chance of ever being released. The measure was inspired by a film with ties to QAnon conspiracy theories.


Unnecessary. Current law already allows courts to impose very harsh sentences for sex trafficking. A single conviction under the state's sex trafficking law carries a presumptive 20-year sentence. What's more, prosecutors can bring multiple charges that allow judges to "stack'' sentences to be served consecutively, so that they are essentially life terms. 


Sloppy language harms trafficking victims. Prop 313 would allow prosecutors to bring similar charges — with similar punishment — against anyone who pays for sex with a minor. This would apply even for a police decoy, when no sex actually occurs. Police sometimes ask former victims to act as decoys in order to catch the people who trafficked them. Prop 313 would close that avenue, instead wrapping up sex trafficking victims themselves in the proposed law's sweeping mandate for a life term, with no chance of getting out. 



Prop 314: No


Summary. Prop 314 is a sweeping ballot measure that asks voters to make it a state crime to cross a federal border without documentation and give local police immunity to arrest those they simply suspect of crossing the border illegally, enabling racial profiling without consequences. The measure makes it a class 6 felony to use false documentation to apply for employment or public benefits, and also makes it a class 2 felony to knowingly sell fentanyl that leads to the death of another person.


Does nothing to address immigration or "the border."  The harsh measure, modeled after a Texas law that is currently tied up in the courts, would criminalize crossing Arizona’s southern border anywhere except at a port of entry. Every police officer in the state would be empowered to arrest people they suspect crossed the border illegally, with no parameters for how that would happen and no requirement that officers actually witness the border crossing. The measure doesn’t add new Border Patrol agents or immigration judges, and doesn't address the asylum system. 


Costly and ineffective. Enforcing Prop 314 could cost Arizona taxpayers at least $325 million a year. The bill’s fiscal note includes estimates of $41 million a year to state and local police; new incarceration costs spiraling to $178 million by FY29; increased spending on public attorneys, judicial proceedings, interpreter services, courtroom maintenance and public benefits administration; and a drop in revenues via state and local tax collections. The measure does not include any funding for any of these costs, though Arizona has had to cut programs due to a fiscal deficit and the law enforcement agencies who will have to enforce the measure are already financially strained. During the bill's passage, Republican lawmakers dismissed concerns over its expense, saying they "will always fund public safety, obviously” and that "we are going to save money by creating a deterrent.” (We'll just point out that, due to massive underfunding by state lawmakers, DPS staffing is already so low that 13 of Arizona's 15 counties have no one patrolling the roads after sundown.)


Opposed by county attorneys. The attorneys responsible for prosecuting public offenses and defending the county in court strongly oppose Prop 314 due to "the burden on local agencies and their already strained resources." One county attorney said the "criminal provisions are unenforceable, bad public policy, and embarrassing for this state" — strong words worth heeding. Even Yavapai County Sheriff David Rhodes, who supported the measure, said the bill would force law enforcement to hire more personnel and asked, "Where is the money going to come from?" 


Opposed by business.The measure has prompted wide opposition from the business community. Greater Phoenix Leadership calls Prop 314 "an unworkable response to a federal problem with unknown consequences" and "an unfunded mandate on local law enforcement." The Greater Phoenix Economic Council cites the "potential hardship for our state's economy and our residents." Even the right-leaning Arizona Chamber of Commerce opposes the measure, warning, "Arizona businesses will pay the price." 


Likely unconstitutional. Prop 314 isn't just unconstitutional; it appears to be triply so. First, our state constitution restricts bills to a single subject, whereas Prop 314 covers everything from immigration to public benefits and fentanyl smuggling. Second, the Arizona Constitution requires that ballot referrals that cost the state money must identify a funding source other than the general fund that is “sufficient to cover the entire immediate and future costs.” It's clear that Prop 314 carries a multitude of new, uncovered costs to the state. Third, the Supremacy Clause of the US Constitution says federal law takes precedence over state law in the case of a conflict. In 2012, the US Supreme Court ruled Arizona has no right to enforce federal immigration laws, meaning Prop 314 is probably federally unconstitutional as well. 


Lawsuits. A lawsuit filed on the single-subject issue was dismissed in mid-July; plaintiffs are appealing. The justices have not said when they will rule, but they need to act soon, as counties begin printing ballots around the third week of August. Lawsuits cannot be filed on the other issues unless the measure goes into effect.



Prop 315: No


Summary. Prop 315 would ask voters to block Arizona agencies from creating rules that would increase regulatory costs by more than $500,000 over 5 years. The Legislature would instead be required to enact legislation to ratify the proposed rule into law.


Ties regulators' hands. Prop 315 would kneecap our state government's ability to regulate spending, from the unaccountable and wasteful (like Arizona's universal ESA voucher program) to needed line items for public health and safety. This shortsighted measure would force lengthy delays for updating regulations — it takes months, sometimes years, for our fractured legislature to pass laws. 


Harms vulnerable Arizonans. A detailed Arizona Republic investigation found many senior living facilities in Arizona are plagued with alarming levels of elder abuse, neglect and inadequate care. In addition to numerous other unknown implications, Prop 315 will harm vulnerable Arizonans by stifling the regulatory development that's crucial for maintaining and improving care standards in assisted living and nursing homes. 


Upends the balance of power. Like the US Supreme Court’s recent alarming decision to torpedo “Chevron deference” and allow inexpert judges to overrule expert regulators, Prop 315 poses a significant risk to effective governance and public safety. This carries profound consequences not only for the rule of law, but also for how agencies (which protect us against everything from pollution and contaminated food to workplace hazards and rising drug prices) function. That is a recipe for chaos.

 

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