Archive for the 'Featured' Category

Giffords’ earmark requests include 2 in Willcox

Thursday, April 16th, 2009

Wick Communications Published: Wednesday, April 15, 2009

By Philip Franchine

TUCSON – Rep. Gabrielle Giffords said Southern Arizona will bounce back from the economic downturn faster than other parts of the country because of innovative businesses and research aimed at renewable energy.

Giffords, delivering her State of the District meeting Wednesday in Tucson, said 2009 won’t rise above being a bad year, economically, but said signs indicate solid steps toward recovery by the end of the year.

She also said she has made more than $103 million in earmark requests for next fiscal year that will help save and create jobs in the region.

Giffords, a Democrat, defended the use of earmarks – appropriations often labeled “pork” that are attached to unrelated bills – saying many provide critical funding for important projects. She said many of her requests are aimed at cutting-edge research, mass transportation and flood control.

For the Willcox area, her list of requests for Fiscal Year 2010 includes a Wastewater Treatment Plant for the City of Willcox ($1 million) and a Surgery Facility Addition for Northern Cochise Community Hospital ($500,000).

The requests were submitted last week to the House Appropriations Committee, which will review them in coming weeks. Giffords said not all earmark requests would be funded.

The request for the wastewater treatment plant for the City of Willcox stated, “Funding will be used to design and construct a new wastewater treatment plant that will restore compliance with Arizona Department of Environmental Quality (ADEQ) and Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) regulations while providing sewer service to the citizens of Willcox. In December 2008, ADEQ issued the City of Willcox Notices of Violation for the operation, maintenance, and water quality for the wastewater treatment plant. The major violations include failing or inadequate equipment, exceeding testing parameters, and possible human contact with virtually untreated wastewater. Due to the seriousness of the violations, ADEQ considers this a very high priority.

“This is an important use of taxpayer funds because the treatment plant needs to undergo extensive renovations or be replaced in order to comply with ADEQ and EPA water quality standards, ensure high quality water for citizens of the City of Willcox, and preserve the natural habitat of Cochise Lake.”

In the request for the surgery facility addition at the Northern Cochise Community Hospital, Giffords said, “Funding will be used to purchase a turn-key modular surgery facility. Northern Cochise Community Hospital is a 24-bed, critical access hospital that provides medical services for approximately 16,000 people throughout the rural areas of Cochise County.

“This project is an important use of taxpayer funds because it will save lives, reduce the cost of transporting emergency patients, wait times and medical expenses for the patient and insurance carriers. There are currently no surgical procedures performed in the Northern Cochise Community Hospital’s service area.”

Giffords said Pima County is home to businesses that could take advantage of a national effort to convert to renewable energy and that can provide scientific advances that will weather a rough economy.

Tucson exports more than $3 billion in goods each year, she said, one-third of that electronic products. The University of Arizona receives 40 percent of its research funding from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, more than any other publicly funded university.

Giffords assessed the district economy as being in rough shape, reflecting the national economy. She said one Arizona economist summed up 2009 by saying, “If everything goes well, it will be a bad year.” If things don’t go well, 2009 would be “terrible.”

The numbers support that difficult view of the economy: 7.4 percent of Arizonans are unemployed; 3,000 foreclosure notices were issued in Pima County in the first quarter of 2009; more than 0.5 percent of all homes in Arizona were foreclosed upon in 2008, meaning 25 a day in Pima County; and the state budget deficit is $2.9 billion.

Giffords said the economy will start to improve this year but that unemployment will lag behind other indicators.

The federal stimulus bill will save or create 70,000 jobs statewide, including 7,000 in Pima County, Giffords said. The new focus on solar energy will mean the nation can double its capacity to generate renewable energy, enough to power 6 million homes.

See the full list of earmark requests at www.giffords.house.gov/legislation/appropriations/index.shtml.

Arizona Range News Managing Edtitor Ainslee Wittig contributed to this article.

Giffords pushes for feds to act on border, Mexico issues

Saturday, March 21st, 2009

Sierra Vista Herald Published: Sunday, March 15, 2009

By Keith J. Allen

SIERRA VISTA – U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords has called on two top federal officials to address a rise in “border violence and drug trafficking.”

In letters to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano on Thursday, Giffords also invited the two Cabinet members or representatives of their departments to a closed-door summit on April 8 in Southern Arizona to discuss the border issues.

“A comprehensive approach to addressing the crisis on our southern border is imperative and I stand committed to working with you to make the U.S.-Mexico relationship a top priority in the Obama administration,” the final paragraph of the Arizona Democrat’s letter says.

The Eighth Congressional District that Giffords represents is one of 10 districts that borders the U.S.-Mexico border. Cochise County is part of Giffords’ district.

The district, which is within the U.S. Border Patrol’s Tucson Sector, has been the nation’s busiest sector for illegal immigrant apprehensions and marijuana seizures.

The congresswoman, who also is a member of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, notes in her letter that more than 1,000 deaths have occurred in Mexico this year and about 6,000 last year due to drug cartel violence.

“In addition, Phoenix now ranks second in the world – after Mexico City – in kidnappings. This is unacceptable and it is clear that bold and collaborative action by the U.S. and Mexican governments is needed,” her letter says.

Giffords uses the November killing of Sonoran police director Juan Manuel Pavon Felix as an example of the need to “strengthen our international partnership with Mexico against the current increase in border violence impacting both of our countries.” She said she met the police director during a November ceremony highlighting the cooperative anti-crime operations being done by U.S. and Mexican law enforcement.

The congresswoman also tells Clinton and Napolitano that she voiced concerns about the Bush administration’s funding request for the Merida Initiative, a program that provides aid to Mexico to battle drug trafficking. Those concerns, she said, range from lack of coordination between U.S. agencies and no “measurable benchmarks” to determine success.

“I remain dismayed that this plan has not produced any clear results in stemming the flood of drugs, guns, fugitives and violence that continues to spill into our country, and my district,” she writes.

Giffords’ letters come just a day after Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer sent a letter to the U.S. Defense Department requesting 250 National Guard troops be stationed along the U.S.-Mexico border in Arizona.

During an interview with the Herald/Review editorial board on Thursday, the Republican governor said she would be negligent if she didn’t ask for federal assistance, and that she is concerned about the drug cartel violence in Mexico. She said it is the federal government’s responsibility to protect the nation’s borders.

“We should be able to feel safe in our country,” she said.

In her letter to Defense Secretary Robert Gates, Brewer said Arizona faces “a number of unique and/or disproportionate challenges relative to other states.”

Napolitano, who held the Arizona governorship before resigning to take the homeland security role in the Obama administration, also asked for federal assistance regarding illegal immigration, including urging the Bush administration last year not to remove National Guard troops from working on the border.

During a visit to Cochise County last month, Arizona Attorney General Terry Goddard also expressed concern about the deadly drug cartel feud in Mexico and that it could spread into Arizona. He noted there have been a higher number of kidnappings in the Phoenix area related to smuggling, and that smugglers were adjusting their tactics along Arizona’s border with Mexico.

Giffords: Plan to help survive recession

Tuesday, February 24th, 2009

Thelma Grimes/Vail Sun, February 20, 2009

U.S. Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords, D-District 8, said the American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan recently passed by Congress and signed by President Barack Obama is not perfect, but it puts America’s economy on track to survive the current recession.

In one of four town hall meetings held in Tucson last week, the second-term Congresswoman said the most important thing Congress can do right now is pass a bill that will help create jobs.

In January alone, 598,000 Americans were put out of work. Since the recession began in Dec. 2007, Giffords said the number of unemployed Americans has climbed to more than 3.6 million, the largest 13-month increase on record.

Consumer confidence and spending fell in December for a record sixth consecutive month, and slid to another all-time low in January.

Giffords said so many of her constituents across Southern Arizona have asked her why the hurry to pass the $880 billion stimulus package.

“Many of you asked what is the big hurry?” she said. “Well, the hurry is that the economy cannot continue on its current trend. The problem is accelerating, hence the need to act.”

Now that the bill is reality, Giffords said residents, state lawmakers and elected officials from cities and counties across America are asking what it means.

Giffords agreed that the more than 1,000-page document is difficult, and there are a lot of questions.

“My goal is to let you know what is included in this enormous legislation,” she said. “This is not a perfect piece of legislation, and this problem did not come up overnight.”

The efforts to get the economy on track will take time, Giffords stressed, as she laid out the plans for education and statewide funding at Pima Community College on Thursday.

Over the next two years, the stimulus package is expected to create 70,000 jobs in Arizona, 8,100 of those in District 8.

Giffords said there also will be tax cuts of up to $800 for two million workers and their families, and 75,000 Arizona families will be eligible for a new $2,500 college tax credit. Unemployment insurance will be expanding, and there will be funding to allow 193 aging school districts across the state to modernize buildings.

Economists looking at the stimulus bill, have said the tax cuts will bring a $13 per week tax cut to the average household.

Giffords stressed during the meeting that a lot of the funding the state may be eligible for in education, road projects and to help the state balance a $3 billion deficit, will depend on the Arizona Legislature.

In a radio show in Tucson Friday morning, Rep. Frank Antenori, R-District 30, said if the federal government wants the state to increase spending they will reject the funds being offered.

Just this year, the state legislature has cut $136 million for public education, and another $225 million from the state’s universities.

With the possibility of the stimulus package bringing an added $803 million to education in Arizona, Giffords said this could prevent deeper cuts to the school system, and prevent teachers from being laid off.

School administrators statewide have said if state lawmakers move forward with proposed budget cuts next year, they will have no other choice than to cut staff and certified teachers.

Attending Thursday’s town hall with Giffords was Dr. Elizabeth Celania-Fagen, superintendent of the Tucson Unified School District (TUSD). TUSD is one of the largest districts in the state, and with the proposed state cuts, could lose up to $63 million next year.

Celania-Gagen said the stimulus bill approved by the federal government brings new hope.

Tucson Vice Mayor Karin Uhlich agreed, stating they now have hope that funding will trickle into the local economy and help with a growing budget deficit, and will pay for shovel-ready projects such as a $75-million trolley system.

Will any of the funds make their way into Cochise County? While no one from the rural county attended the town halls in Tucson, Giffords said it will come down to local governments’ applying for money.

Benson had originally submitted proposals for about $900,000 in projects, but Public Works Director Brad Hamilton said most of them were eliminated because they did not have the right classification.

A current list of road projects moving forward has Avondale receiving most of the funding with 50 approved projects. The lone project approved in Cochise County is in Tombstone.

Following Thursday’s town hall, Giffords said it’s still early, and she has been communicating with rural communities to get involved and request funding for various projects.

The points of this, she said, is not only to create jobs and improve infrastructure, but will also help local economies with a plan to buy supplies and equipment locally.

Besides education and other funding, Giffords said the massive stimulus bill also addresses the state’s social service agencies and will put more funding toward Medicaid and health insurance for unemployed workers.

Giffords votes in favor of stimulus

Wednesday, February 4th, 2009

San Pedro Valley News-Sun, February 3, 2009

Thelma Grimes

U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords voted yes on the $825-billion stimulus package proposed by President Barack Obama after urging from Southern Arizona community and business leaders.

After weeks of discussion with local decision makers, Giffords, a District 8 Democrat, said, “Arizonans are looking to Congress to move swiftly to stem job losses and protect critical infrastructure like our public education system, healthcare for working families and support for small businesses. We need to act quickly.”

Acting quickly is just what the U.S. House of Representatives did, with House Democrats voting in favor of President Obama’s stimulus package put forward in the first seven days of his taking the oath of office.

A statement from Giffords estimated that more than 500,000 American jobs are being lost each month, and passage of the bill is the start to reverse this trend and put the economy back on track.

However, Giffords did state she has concerns about the nation’s growing debt. She has since urged President Obama and House leaders to stay focused on the nation’s long-term goal of deficit reduction.

“Although I am pleased that this legislation contains an historic level of transparency, oversight and accountability, which will guarantee taxpayer dollars are spent wisely, I am concerned by the magnitude of this bill. I take seriously the responsibility to monitor these investments closely so Southern Arizona taxpayers see the result,” Giffords said.

With the House passing the stimulus package 244-188 vote, the U.S. Senate is set to start debating the issue this week. All except 11 Democrats passed the package in the House, and all 177 Republicans voted against the bill.

According to an Associated Press report, the bill had attracted criticism from Republicans and some Democrats for spending billions of dollars on education, despite questions on whether or not the bill would actually create jobs.

Sen. John McCain said earlier last week that he would not vote for the bill as it stands now, stating he questions some of the bill’s spending, such as the $275 billion in tax breaks that includes money for people who don’t pay income taxes, $550 billion in spending, including $200 million to re-sod the National Mall and a planned $360 million to fight sexually transmitted diseases.

“We need to make tax cuts permanent, and we need to make a commitment that there’ll be no new taxes,” McCain, a Republican, said in a Fox News interview. “We need to cut business taxes. We need to have a commitment that after a couple of quarters of growth that we will embark on a path to reduce spending to get our budget in balance.”

President Obama has called for bipartisan politics as the historic bill passes through Congress, stating last Wednesday that he would be willing to work with Republicans to make changes.

In Arizona, state lawmakers have said with a pending $2 billion budget crisis, the need for federal funds is essential. Arizona posted an unemployment rate of 6.9 percent in December, the highest since 1993.

Under the current approved bill, Giffords’ office said more than 125,000 jobs would be created or saved by the year 2010. Arizona is also set to receive $6.5 billion in direct state funding.

The financial assistance will put $585 million toward Arizona highways and bridges, $277 million for modernization, renovation and repair of public schools, $1.1 billion in pell grant funding, assisting an estimated 350,000 low-income college students, $18 million for youth employment and training, $4 million for low-income home energy assistance and $1.9 billion in Medicaid funding.

Giffords said more than two million Arizonans are also expected to benefit through tax cuts in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act through a refundable tax credit of up to $500 per worker or $1,000 per couple filing jointly.

“State and local leaders in Arizona have a very hard job to do during these difficult economic times,” Giffords said. “I am committed to working together to help provide the necessary tools to get through this crisis and lead our state toward a stronger economic future.”

Elected officials throughout Southern Arizona agreed with Giffords’ vote of approval last week.

President Obama has stated on several occasions that he would like the bill signed into law by Feb. 16.

House passes economic stimulus – Giffords: Plan will help Arizona budget woes

Saturday, January 31st, 2009

House passes economic stimulus

Giffords: Plan will help Arizona budget woes

By Bill Hess
Herald/Review, January 29, 2009

WASHINGTON – The U.S. House of Representatives’ version of the stimulus package on Wednesday has more than $6.5 billion for Arizona and will help ease the state’s budget shortfall, U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords said.

In voting for the bill, the Democrat said, “Inaction was not acceptable.”

The legislation in the House passed by a vote of 244-188. The Senate has a different stimulus proposal it is considering.

“By infusing into the state more than $250 million for education, nearly $2 billion for Medicaid and other funds the state’s budget will be helped,” said Giffords, who represents the 8th Congressional District, which includes all of Cochise County.

State legislators are facing a $1.6 billion deficit for the current fiscal year, and an estimated $3 billion in the 2010 fiscal year.

Additional stimulus money is for highway and bridges, assisting unemployment and training programs and other needs, Giffords said during a phone interview with the Herald/Review.

Local communities that have provided a list of “shovel ready” road projects to the Arizona Department of Transportation could see some of the nearly $600 million that will be provided to the state, if the bill makes it through both chambers of Congress, she said.

The proposed multi-billion-dollar stimulus package in the House also includes money for federal programs that can bring funding the states, she said.

For example, NASA is supposed to get $500,000 to be used for grants and that could continue to help the University of Arizona, which has been a recipient of such funds in the past.

The university receives 22 percent of its federal grant money from NASA, and Giffords sees no reason that will not continue.

The proposed Senate bill has $1.5 billion recommended for NASA grants, she said.

Giffords’ husband is a NASA astronaut. But on Wednesday, she also was named the chair of the House Committee on Science and Technology’s Space and Aeronautics Subcommittee.

The House leadership has said ensuring the stimulus package is on President Barack Obama’s desk is a priority and that the chamber will remain in session until the House and Senate agree to a final bill.

The congresswoman, now in her second term, sees that happening by mid-February.

Giffords said the House version of the bill requires transparency in how the federal funds are spent by recipients to ensure jobs are created and to track how the money is used to spur growth in the economy.

Track the stimulus money

The stimulus bill, formally titled the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, has a dedicated Web site – recovery.gov – that allows citizens to track every penny and to hold federal, state and local officials accountable.

Key requirements of the House proposal are:

• A quarterly presidential report on the status of the economy.

• A public notification of contracts and grants awarded to be published online to include a description of what is funded, the purpose and the total cost.

• A review of recovery funding by the Government Accountability Office.

• An agreement by the president and congressional leaders that the legislation won’t contain specific earmarks.

What would Arizona get?

Here is a summary of money that Arizona would get from the economic stimulus package being voted on Wednesday in the House of Representatives. The Senate is considering a separate stimulus bill.

• Highways and bridges: $586.5 million

• Mass transit: $89.8 million

• Other rail: $5 million

• Wastewater treatment: $39.2 million

• Low-income energy assistance: $4 million

• Head Start: $12.1 million

• School modernization: $390.4 million

• Education technology grants: $18.7 million

• State budget aid: $1.3 billion

Source: The numbers are based on tables released by the House Appropriations Committee and the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee. Compiled by the Associated Press.

Giffords sees economic crisis, seeks project ideas

Thursday, January 15th, 2009

By Bill Hess

Sierra Vista Herald/Review,  January 9, 2009

WASHINGTON – Calling what is facing the 111th Congress “an exciting time as well as one of deep concern,” U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords said during a telephone interview on Thursday that “the nation’s economic crisis is deepening.”

Once the December unemployment figures are released, it is expected more than 2 million Americans will have lost their jobs in 2008, the Arizona Democrat said.

The nation is facing a growing problem approaching what America went through during the Great Depression of the late 1920s and early 1930s, the congresswoman said. And, she said, it appears that this year the number of people facing unemployment will grow by the thousands each month.

Giffords said congressional and other national leaders will have to join President-elect Barack Obama in addressing the issues head on and not to fall into bitter partisanship.

And whatever federal stimulus package is to be considered, it will need to have input at local and state levels as well, the congresswoman said.

On Saturday, she is scheduled to meet with local and state officials in Tucson at an Economic Stimulus Forum in an effort to collect suggestions for Congress to consider to start reviving the economy. Sierra Vista Mayor Bob Strain and the Assistant City Manager Mary Jacobs are two of the officials who plan to attend the meeting. Jacobs said the list she’ll have will consist of 23 “shovel ready” ideas that have been designed and are ready to go but do not have city funding. The total estimated cost of the projects is about $37 million.

Strain said most are road projects, as well as one for improvement at the city-operated airport and a wastewater treatment plant to serve Castle & Cooke’s  Tribute subdivision.

The mayor said Giffords’ effort to ask for input this early in the federal process is much better than having funds provided without input.

The importance is increased in light of the state’s financial woes that has seen a lessening of Highway User Revenue Funds and income and sales taxes that are distributed throughout the state, Strain said.

Jacobs said Giffords’ Saturday event is a good way for her to understand the needs of rural communities within the 8th Congressional District.

Strain said he and other leaders of local governments in the district understand the wish lists still have to compete with the state’s needs and other entities nationwide.

“It’s just an initial step in the stimulus process,” he said.

Giffords said that while the stimulus package Obama is seeking is most important, there are a number of items Congress will be handling.

An issue of concern in Arizona is immigration. She said she hopes Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., and the future secretary of Homeland Security, Arizona’s current Gov. Janet Napolitano, a Democrat, will work together, as they have promised, on immigration issues.

Noting that gas prices have gone down, Giffords said there now seems to be a lack of concern about the energy issues that have to be addressed, which she called unfortunate.

“I’ve noticed there has been a increase in the sales of big cars again,” she said.

But she said the federal government cannot re-enter a complacent zone and must push for better energy projects.

One of her major projects revolves around solar energy, and Giffords and U.S. Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., are introducing a bill to boost the federal government’s use of solar and wind energy.

The bill, H.R. 175, allows the General Services Administration to enter into renewable energy contracts for 30 years, instead of being limited to 10 years, as laws now limit the agency that manages most non-military federal properties. GSA is in the process of “greening” federal buildings which includes the installation of solar panels.

Solar energy is an industry that can employ many people in Arizona, Giffords said.

“By 2012 solar energy will be on track to be as cost effective and on par with the coal industry,” the congresswoman said, adding that now is the time for Arizona to step up and be in the forefront of the growing new energy program.

She is a little disappointed she will not be able to attend a solar energy conference in Phoenix today that she has worked on for six months. She must remain in Washington, D.C.

However, she will address the event through a video teleconferencing hookup.

Giffords is a member of the House Science Committee and the House Armed Services Committee, two panels she also served on during her first term.

In her role on the Armed Services Committee, Giffords said there are a number of issues that must be addressed during her second term.

Those issues include ensuring the armed forces have the best equipment needed for the continuing war on terrorism, especially in light that much of the material has to be replaced due to its use during the past seven years.

Southern Arizona has three military installations – Fort Huachuca in Sierra Vista and Davis-Monthan Air Force Base in Tucson, and the Arizona Air National Guard’s 162nd Fighter Wing at Tucson International Airport.

Some home-owning service members also have expressed concern that when moving from one area of the nation to another, they face the possibility of not being able to sell their homes in the current economy.

This, they said, could impact their military service because the armed forces consider foreclosures as financially irresponsible, which leads to the removal of security clearances needed in their work.

Giffords said this is an issue that Congress must review and see if relief can be provided to the service members.

Other issues important to service members and their families, such as ensuring service members and their family members have the best health care.

“If we lose the families, we will lost the service member,” Giffords said.

As the 111th Congress continues, Giffords  expects  more issues to appear. But, she said, most of the issues are going to be about “the economy, the economy, the economy.”

Giffords questioned about stimulus plan

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

Local leaders worry red tape will tie up federal cash

Patrick McNamara

The Explorer, January14, 2009

With as much as $800 billion up for grabs, regional leaders were keen to hear how they might get their fair shares out of President-elect Barack Obama’s proposed economic stimulus package.

Officials from several Southern Arizona communities were on hand last Saturday at Tucson’s Eastside City Hall, where Democratic U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords held a forum on the incoming president’s plan.

The president-elect has said the money would go primarily toward roadway improvements and other infrastructure projects.

At stake for many here, though, including Oro Valley Mayor Paul Loomis and Marana Mayor Ed Honea, was how the money will find its way to local coffers and to whom local leaders should forward their project-funding wish lists.

Many local governments in Giffords 8th Congressional District already have sent such lists to her office, including Oro Valley, Marana, Tucson and Pima County.

But Giffords implied that she’s limited in what strings she can pull. The money likely will come in the form of block grants, which will be administered by state agencies, she explained.

The Arizona Department of Transportation in particular could play a leading role in doling out economic stimulus money.

If that’s the case, then local governments would have to lobby state lawmakers on behalf of local projects.

“State legislators across Arizona will have to work to make sure their voices are heard,” Giffords said.

Some officials raised concerns that Maricopa County might swallow most of the money that could come Arizona’s way.

ADOT Board Chairman Si Schorr, who represents Pima County, suggested one way to prevent that from happening would be to adhere to the transportation department’s funding breakdown, the so-called Casa Grande Accord.

Under that agreement, Maricopa County receives 37 percent of state highway funds, Pima gets 13 percent, and the rest of the counties divvy up the remaining 50 percent.

“If it veers very far from that mathematical formula, there will be some very unhappy people,” Schorr said.

But, even before federal lawmakers write the first draft of the proposed stimulus package, some local leaders worry that the money could get tied up in bureaucratic red tape.

Cochise County Supervisor Richard Searle raised the point, later echoed by other regional leaders, that money allocated at the state level for local projects often takes years to wind its way through the maze of legal and procedural requirements.

Searle points to Davis Road, a 15-mile rural thoroughfare between highways 80 and 191 near Tombstone.

Former Congressman Jim Kolbe, Giffords’ predecessor, four years ago secured $3 million in federal money for the county to resurface the road.

“A shovel has not been turned on that project yet,” Searle said.

He blames ADOT for the delay and thinks much of Obama’s stimulus money could get held up in state bureaucracies as well.

“This $700 billion could get tied up and not get to the municipalities for two years,” Searle said.

Giffords stressed that the best way for local governments to ensure speedy delivery of money would be to make sure their projects are ready to go.

Oro Valley, for example, included on its projects list the already-under-construction Municipal Operations Complex in Rancho Vistoso and the long-planned-for Naranja Town Site park.

“The projects had to be ready to begin,” Oro Valley Assistant Town Manager Jerene Watson said.

Marana officials also included projects currently planned or those already approved by voters.

The list they submitted includes money for the Twin Peaks interchange project. That project is part of the $2.1 billion Regional Transportation Authority package voters approved in 2004.

Pima County officials seek $80 million for a new courthouse complex.(Click here for a list of Pima County requests.) .

County voters approved selling bonds for the court complex in 2004. But, when it came time to start construction, county officials realized the $76 million allocated for the project wouldn’t cover the costs, which have more than doubled to $155 million.

“If we even get one project, that would free up funds in our general fund,” Oro Valley’s Watson said.

Economic stimulus: Giffords holds roundtable

Tuesday, January 13th, 2009

By Ellen Sussman

Green Valley News, January 13, 2009

To keep state, county and municipal elected and appointed officials informed about President-elect Barack Obama’s American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan, which will soon come before Congress and how it will affect Arizona, U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords hosted a roundtable meeting on Saturday at the east side City Hall in Tucson.

Welcomed by City Council member Rodney Glassman, 41 representatives at the three levels of government attended and included Green Valley Community Coordinating Council Executive Director Sandi Richey, Member-at-Large Sandra Stone, town of Sahuarita Mayor Lynne Skelton and Town Manager Jim Stahle.

Pointing out foreclosures as one of the economic indicators in Arizona, Giffords said the state ranks third in the nation for foreclosures, after Nevada and Florida.

One in every 198 homes in Arizona received a foreclosure notice in November 2008. In Pima County, foreclosures increased 289 percent from 2006 to 2008; in 2008, there were 8,961 foreclosures in Pima County.

Referring to the Recovery and Reinvestment Plan, Giffords said, “We need to work across party lines and create shovel-ready jobs in Southern Arizona.”

The plan includes saving at least three million jobs, creating “green” jobs, investing at least $750 billion into energy, education, health care, state budget relief and infrastructure plus tax cuts and unemployment relief.

Of “Green” Energy and Efficiency Investments, President-elect Obama’s plan calls for doubling alternative energy production in the next three years, supporting new energy technologies and jobs, modernizing 75 percent of federal buildings and improving the energy efficiency of two million American homes.

From the state level

Doug Cole, deputy director of Secretary of State Jan Brewer’s transition team, said, “This is not a Democratic issue or a Republican issue, it’s not an Arizona issue, but a national issue.”

Brewer will soon replace and complete Gov. Janet Napolitano’s term when the governor becomes Homeland Security Secretary.

Director of the Arizona Department of Transportation Victor Mendez said all levels of government are under stress. Speaking of the proposed nationwide investments of $30.25 billion for highways and bridges, $12 billion for transit and $5 billion for rail, Mendez said, “This is an investment for the future of the infrastructure of the country.”

He emphasized the need to create “ready-to-go” jobs within the next three to six months and said, “If we’re not ready, the money will go somewhere else.”

Mendez is proposing $1.3 billion in statewide, ready-to-go projects with $317 million for Pima County and said every $1 billion generates 35,000 jobs.

Of the proposed $800,000 billion stimulus bill and the $30.25 billion allocated for highways and bridges, Mendez said, “Arizona’s portion is not a whole lot.”

He called for sustainable jobs; not jobs that will be over in a year or two and said he doesn’t have a solution but it’s something that needs to be worked on.

Deputy Director of the Arizona Department of Commerce Kent Ennis spoke about energy conservation block grants to improve state buildings plus grants to improve energy efficiency in commercial buildings and said, “We need to take full advantage of what’s coming down the pike.”

Q and A

Reiterating what was mentioned earlier, Giffords said, “It’s important to have things right and to have projects ready-to-go. We want this to be as bipartisan as possible,” adding that all funding, including ADOT, will go through the governor’s office.

Responding to an attendee who challenged ADOT to make transportation projects “green,” Giffords said, “Most green projects are not ready-to-go. That’s why we’re here today. We need to get a green list ready.

Arizona Senator-elect Linda Lopez said there will be a need for funds for childcare if mothers and fathers will be going back to work. Giffords said she would advocate for this.

Closing the two-hour meeting, Giffords again emphasized the need for ready-to-go projects that will create jobs and adding “green” projects down the line.

In a one-question inquiry with Deputy Director Cole of Secretary of State Brewer’s transition team, when asked who will be the director of the governor’s Southern Arizona office, Cole told the Green Valley News, “We’ll announce it this week.”

For up-to-date information on the economic stimulus legislation, go to www.giffords.house.gov.

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