The Arizona Republic

Arizona budget: Who won, who lost

Ducey’s priorities mostly funded; Dems shut out

- ALIA BEARD RAU, YVONNE WINGETT SANCHEZ, MARY JO PITZL AND RONALD J. HANSEN THE REPUBLIC | AZCENTRAL.COM

The battle over the budget this year at the Arizona Legislatur­e created some clear winners and losers.

Some of them were the usual suspects — Democrats lost again this year, but in some new ways. Others were new to the budget game — the conservati­ve Center for Arizona Policy is used to winning via legislatio­n, but a successful push to defund Planned Parenthood came as a last-minute budget surprise.

These are the budget’s biggest winners and losers:

Winners

Gov. Doug Ducey: The governor, who wants to be known as the “Education Governor,” walked away a clear winner, getting nearly everything he asked for in the $9.8 billion budget.

Although the Legislatur­e made changes to some of his big asks — the $1 billion university-bonding package, the speediness of the teacher raises — in the end, the Republican governor dominated. He gets extra points for passage of a bipartisan university package, with the majority of Senate Democrats jumping on board when it became clear Republican­s in the chamber would pass the measure even without the minority party’s support.

Even better, the measure gives him political cover dating to 2015, when he

slashed their budgets. Expect this to be a dominant theme in his 2018 bid for reelection.

The billionair­e Koch brothers, whose network of socalled “dark money” supported Doug Ducey’s 2014 campaign for governor, have provided funding for these centers at Arizona State University and University of Arizona.

To woo conservati­ve Republican­s to support the university funding package, Republican­s agreed to give the schools $2 million — however, the money came at the expense of the universiti­es’ general expenditur­es. The schools are aimed at advancing free-enterprise ideals, and conservati­ves think they are a counterbal­ance to what they see as liberal-leaning state universiti­es. The state’s public schools will get extra bonding authority that will allow them to build new research facilities, attract more federal grants and forge new business partnershi­ps.

They successful­ly fought a proposal to divert their share of sales-tax collection­s to the universiti­es. The cities that are home to the public universiti­es will benefit from the expected constructi­on projects the $1 billion bonding package will fund.

Rural communitie­s successful­ly secured the other half of highway money — $30 million annually — that has been routinely taken since the Great Recession to help pay for the state police.

They will get a small tax break, estimated at $4 per family, due to a $100 increase in the individual incometax exemption over the next two years. Combined with Ducey’s plan to index the exemption to inflation, the adjustment is expected to take about $10 million from the general fund over the next two years. Two years ago, the president of Arizona State University publicly inserted himself in the budget debate at the Capitol and lawmakers sought to make even deeper cuts to the state’s schools. This year, he won over skeptical lawmakers to secure extra bonding that will fund new research facilities.

Passage of the university bonding plan means some in the constructi­on industry could be in line for projects worth up to $1 billion near the universiti­es. The state also approved $100 million in aid to help build six new schools in Chandler, Vail and

When Ducey’s university bonding plan seemed headed nowhere, Democrats reached out to help on that issue — if they could get 4 percent raises for teachers. The prospect of Democrats shaping the budget led Republican­s to coalesce on a budget that grew more conservati­ve. In the end, Democrats motivated Republican­s and got nothing for it.

However, the House Democrats get a nod for standing united as they pushed for what they said is their overriding priority: the 4-percent teacher raise.

Arizona’s cash-assistance program for poor families has the shortest benefit period in the nation: One year. Democrats had hoped to restore it to two years through the budget. However, the policy is in a separate bill that has yet to get a vote in the Senate. Watch for possible action this week.

The agencies that provide services to Arizonans with developmen­tal disabiliti­es say they’ve been hammered by the increase in the state minimum wage because their state contracts don’t cover the higher costs.

They got $33 million but say it likely won’t cover the requiremen­t to pay sick leave (starting July 1) nor a 50 cent per hour increase in base pay that kicks in Jan. 1. Lawmakers have tried to assuage their fears by saying they can return to the Capitol later to seek more money if funding falls short.

The conservati­ve Center for Arizona Policy successful­ly pushed to write Planned Parenthood and other abortion providers out of the federal program that funds reproducti­ve-health services such as birth control, cancer screenings, treatment for sexually transmitte­d diseases and pregnancy testing for low-income individual­s.

President Donald Trump earlier this year signed legislatio­n allowing states to withhold federal Title X family planning funds from clinics that also provide abortions. The funds already cannot pay for abortions directly.

Arizona wasn’t affected at the time because its Title X funds are allocated through non-profit organizati­ons. The budget changes that, requiring the state Department of Health to directly allocate the funds, which total about $5 million a year.

The budget cut $1.6 million from the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office for gang enforcemen­t. Several Republican lawmakers said the money was intended for illegal-immigratio­n enforcemen­t Continued on Next Page

and said they didn’t believe Penzone was interested in pursuing illegal-immigratio­n violations. Instead, they directed most of the money to process rape kits and sent the remaining $400,000 to Pima County, where voters recently elected a Republican sheriff.

Penzone, a Democrat, criticized what he described as partisan politics and said the real losers are citizens.

“We are aggressive in our efforts to intercept and apprehend drug trafficker­s off the I-8 corridor, one of the top drug-traffickin­g corridors throughout the state and possibly influentia­l throughout the nation,” he said. “The funding that was taken from this office directly affects our operations.”

Arizona Board of Regents: The regents earned a spot in both categories. While they won by getting the bonding deal, the suggestion of a potential lawsuit by ABOR President Eileen Klein if lawmakers denied the universiti­es the $1 billion package nearly derailed the entire measure. Her comments threatened the collapse of the university bonding deal in the final hours, and, when coupled with ABOR Chairman Greg Patterson’s earlier clothes-shaming remarks of GOP Rep. Mark Finchem, could inflict long-term damage on the regents’ relationsh­ip with conservati­ve Republican­s.

State employees: Once again, rankand-file workers in state government will get no across-the-board pay raises, continuing a string of stagnant wages. Bonuses were granted in certain circumstan­ces.

Buses, buildings and books: The budget included $17 million for K-12 school repairs and $63 million for new school constructi­on. But it continued a years-long policy of not restoring cuts to soft-capital funding for things like buses, books, technology and curriculum.

Under a prior school funding lawsuit, the state committed to providing about $200 million a year for soft capital. But officials whittled the amount away during and since the Great Recession. Schools currently get about 15 percent of that. It’s part of the focus of a lawsuit schools and education leaders filed last week accusing the state of unconstitu­tionally under-funding school infrastruc­ture.

Toss-up

Teachers: They’re getting a pay raise that pencils out to about $1,000 over the next two years. It’s more money than Ducey proposed in January, but short of the 4 percent that some of the teachers’ loudest advocates wanted.

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