by admin | Jan 26, 2017 | News and Updates

Mayor Greg Stanton claims that the City of Phoenix is beating the competition in attracting new businesses and jobs because of targeted tax subsidies and social progressive policies.
The Club debunks these claims and shows that any credit for job growth in Phoenix belongs to an overall business friendly environment of low-taxes and regulation in Arizona.
by admin | Jan 19, 2017 | News and Updates
The Club recently shed light on the effort in Pinal County to ask voters to approve an additional half-cent transportation tax increase on top of the current transit tax. Following a series of State Auditor General reports, the existing tax—which dates back to the late 80’s—has a long recorded history of misuse and misallocation of funds. Transportation dollars have been used to give Christmas bonuses to city employees and the majority of the dollars are being allocated to the politically powerful municipalities in the county and not going toward needed regional road projects.
Due to opposition from the plan from the autodealers, homebuilders and taxpayer watchdog groups like the Club, the Pinal Regional Transportation Authority (RTA) backed off on forcing a vote on the measure and has been working to figure out how to overcome the critisism of the $640M spending spree.
Their solution? They have asked Representative TJ Shope to sponsor special legislation to allow the RTA to include lower tax rates for certain tax classifications (likely automobiles and new home sales) as part of the proposed tax increase, an obvious attempt to buy off the political opposition to secure passage of the tax hike.
It is simply poor policy to create carve outs in the tax code that pick winners and losers among taxpayers. If Pinal County leaders believe more resources are needed for transportation, they ought to look internally first, both how they have managed past funds and prioritized transportation projects. We think they would find a great opportunity for improvement. And perhaps they could save their residents a little money too.
by admin | Jan 12, 2017 | News and Updates
While most people were enjoying the holidays with their family late last month, the local media was trumpeting a story declaring that Arizona has the lowest election integrity in the nation:
“Arizona was ranked worst in the country for electoral integrity in a recent post-election survey of political scientists.
The Perceptions of Electoral Integrity survey asked political experts about elections in the states where they live in order to measure their perceptions of how well or poorly their state adhered to international standards of conduct before, during and after an election.
Although it measures perceptions of electoral integrity, as opposed to actual electoral integrity itself, the methodology is widely trusted and used to compare electoral performance around the world.
The concern is that just the perception of electoral fraud or corruption, even without actual proof of fraud, could lead to a loss of public confidence in the voting process.”
While Arizona was the subject of some election controversy over the last year (the Presidential Preference Election comes to mind), being ranked dead last in election integrity should have generated some scrutiny by local journalists. Instead the media ran with the story, though a cursory look at the report and the organization behind it, the left leaning Electoral Integrity Project, would have exposed its shortcomings.
For example, the State of Michigan, which ended up having more votes cast in November than voters, somehow was ranked higher than Arizona in election integrity. Another common theme by the “experts” participating in the study was that states with stricter voter ID laws (such as Arizona and Wisconsin) consistently scored lower on election integrity than states with liberal voter ID laws like Michigan*. Though voter ID laws are controversial, including them as a component that erodes election integrity is an unfounded conclusion based upon the opinion of the authors.
Additionally, Arizona scores near the bottom on integrity when it comes to district boundaries and gerrymandering. That is a very peculiar result since Arizona has, unlike most other states, an independent redistricting commission that draws our legislative and congressional lines. Do the authors of the study (or the Arizona “experts” they talked to) have evidence of corruption on the commission that is worse than other states? Very doubtful, yet not a single reporter even questioned this finding.
Instead, the media completely accepted the work of an organization that in the past claimed that Cuba and North Korea had more election integrity than half the states in the US.
Now whether this happened because of an unwillingness to fact check or because of an underlying desire to believe the study, we will never know. And to the credit of the Arizona Republic, they are at least trying to clean up the mess. But the damage from the media coverage and the false narrative it created will continue to live on.
*Michigan passed a new voter ID law after the 2016 November Election
by admin | Jan 10, 2017 | News and Updates
Yesterday Governor Ducey gave his much anticipated State of the State speech, outlining his policy and budget agenda for this year. One of the better initiatives announced is a new program to identify and eliminate job-killing regulations.
Deemed the “Regulatory Rollback” initiative, this citizen driven program allows taxpayers and business owners to recommend rules and regulations that stifle growth and either need to be fixed or repealed. Anyone can make recommendations at the website http://azgovernor.gov/redtape/
The Governor’s goal is to slash 500 regulations by the end of 2017. The Club commends Ducey’s commitment to making Arizona the best and easiest state in which to start and grow a business, and urge every resident to visit www.azgovernor.gov/redtape/ to make recommendations on regulations to be eliminated.
by admin | Jan 5, 2017 | News and Updates
President Obama’s legacy is littered with sweeping Executive Orders, unprecedented levels of federal government expansion and the diminishment of state primacy. However, as the President prepares to vacate the White House, many of his hallmark policies face a dubious future. One such policy is the Clean Power Plan (CPP) written and administered by the Environmental Protection Agency.
The CPP rolled out in August of 2015 and it hit the states like a lightning rod. The plan requires states to meet specific carbon-cutting targets by 2030, based upon the levels of greenhouse gases they released from producing electricity in 2012. For Arizona, the EPA calls their goal “moderate,” however the target is to reduce 10 million short tons of emissions a staggering 25 percent.
Most of this reduction will come from coal. The draconian targets will require many states to plug smokestacks and decommission coal burning plants.
The U.S Energy Information Administration (EIA) has conducted its own modeling on the CPP. Their analysis predicts the CPP alone would force nearly 60 coal plants to close nationwide. Coal plants which since the 1990s have sunk $130 billion into upgrading their facilities. Following significant EPA rules in 2005, 67 percent of the coal fleet in the U.S had retrofitted some system for scrubbing, with momentous and positive results.
Thousands of jobs will disappear as a result of coal plant closures. But perhaps more saliently, energy production will be displaced and costs will increase to consumers. Arizona enjoys relatively low energy costs, a fact that makes the state attractive to big employers and affordable to residents. A new report by the Pacific Research Institute illustrates the CPP burden on consumers by state.
With almost a third of Arizona’s resident electricity being produced by coal, Maricopa County residents could see their electricity costs increase by 10.3 percent. Poor families will be hit disproportionally hard with costs that could equal 11.32 percent of their income. The Electricity Price Index has continued to rise with the coal losing more market share. With 48-50 million Americans in poverty, energy poverty will force many families to choose between climatizing their homes through brutal winters and summers or putting food on the table. This is why immediately following the roll out of the CPP, 28 states filed a suit against the EPA.
As the litigation and political fallout continues from these regulations, the question now is what will the Trump administration do with the Clean Power Plan? Given that the new proposed head of the EPA, Scott Pruitt, was one of the first attorney generals to sue the EPA, the hope is that the plan will be quickly dismantled. Couple that with Trump’s appointment to the Supreme Court, it is possible that we might see the EPA’s power grab struck down. Elections do have consequences, which means the future for energy freedom and state’s rights looks just a little bit brighter.
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