Wednesday, May 1, 2024

Help PLAN TUCSON for our city's future


SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS AND GET INVOLVED:
JOIN PLAN TUCSON FOR A COMMUNITY FORUM

Plan Tucson invites all community members to participate in our upcoming Community Forums, a crucial step in updating the City’s General Plan. This long-range policy document is central to defining the future of Tucson, addressing vital areas such as housing, transportation, climate action, and growth.

These forums will be the last public meetings for Phase 2 of the Plan Tucson Update and the best opportunity to provide critical feedback on policy guidance that will impact how the city addresses housing, sustainability, equity, transportation, and much more before the first draft of the plan is written. Your input will also help update our Future Growth Scenario Map, guiding where and what type of development is encouraged across the city.

Virtual Forum
Tuesday, May 14, 2024
5:30 p.m. - 7:30 p.m.

REGISTER HERE

In-Person Forum
Saturday, May 18, 2024
10 a.m. - 12 p.m.
Ward 2 Office, 7820 E. Broadway Blvd.

REGISTER HERE

Both community forums will have prizes, and the in-person event will have food and family-friendly activities.

The Plan Tucson Community Forums aren’t just about shaping policy - they’re about building a better community. The more feedback we receive, the better the plan reflects our shared values and aspirations.

For more information about Plan Tucson and an overview on what has happened through Phase 1 and Phase 2, visit plantucson.tucsonaz.gov.


COMPARTE SUS IDEAS Y PARTICIPA:
ÚNETE CON PLAN TUCSON EN UN FORO COMUNITARIO

Plan Tucson invita a todos los miembros de la comunidad a participar en nuestros próximos Foros Comunitarios, un paso crucial en la actualización del Plan General de la Ciudad. Este documento de política a largo plazo es fundamental para definir el futuro de Tucson, abordando áreas vitales como vivienda, transporte, acción climática y crecimiento.

Estos foros serán las últimas reuniones públicas para la Fase 2 de la Actualización del Plan Tucson y la mejor oportunidad para proporcionar comentarios críticos sobre la orientación política que impactará cómo la ciudad aborda la vivienda, la sostenibilidad, la equidad, el transporte y mucho más antes de que se escriba el primer borrador del plan. Su aporte también ayudará a actualizar nuestro Mapa de Crecimiento Futuro, guiando dónde y qué tipo de desarrollo se fomenta en toda la ciudad.

Foro Virtual
Martes 14 de mayo de 2024
5:30 p.m. - 7:30 p.m.

REGÍSTRESE AQUÍ

Foro Presencial
Sábado 18 de mayo de 202
10 a.m. - 12 p.m
Oficina del Distrito 2, 7820 E. Broadway Blvd.

REGÍSTRESE AQUÍ

Ambos eventos tendrán premios, y el evento presencial contará con comida y actividades familiares.

Los Foros Comunitarios del Plan Tucson no solo se tratan de dar forma a políticas, sino de construir una comunidad mejor. Cuantos más comentarios recibamos, mejor reflejará el plan nuestros valores y aspiraciones compartidos.

Para obtener más información sobre Plan Tucson y una descripción general de lo que ha ocurrido en la Fase 1 y la Fase 2, visite plantucson.tucsonaz.gov.

 

Plan Tucson Newsletter 2

Project Contact

Cesar Acosta, Principal Planner
cesar.acosta2@tucsonaz.gov

Sunday, April 21, 2024

Fight HB2124 that encourages over-pumping of groundwater


This legislative session is finally nearing an end...thankfully. This year has seen so many bad water bills! 

HB2124 is scheduled for a vote in the House of Representatives, likely Wednesday.

HB2124 agricultural operations; water; protection; definition (Smith) would punish plaintiffs for filing suits against someone who is using too much groundwater or taking another user's water by reclassifying those suits as "nuisance lawsuits" and requiring them to pay lawyers fees. This would make it much harder to prevent deep-pocketed large agricultural water users from taking too much water. 

Ask House Members to Oppose HB2124 that benefits big groundwater pumpers to the detriment of small homeowners, farmers, and individual businesses.


Use that district to find contact info on your Representatives:

https://www.azleg.gov/MemberRoster/

Sunday, April 14, 2024

Last chance to stop dirty bills

Thursday, April 4, 2024

Urge Governor Hobbs to veto HB2788 that prohibits Arizona from doing anything in the UN Sustainable Development Goals

HB2788 United Nations; sustainable development; prohibition (Jones: Biasiucci, Bliss, et al.) has passed both houses of the legislature on a party line vote and is going to the governor's desk for approval. It prohibits Arizona or any of its political subdivisions from adopting the sustainable development agenda of the United Nations, which means they are objecting to support for ending poverty, support for achieving food security, ensuring healthy lives, achieving gender equality, and protecting the planet and our ability to live on it by objecting to action on climate change and promoting water sustainability. Effectively, the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) apply to all functions of government so, if the governor doesn't veto this bill, state and local governments would be prohibited from spending funds on nearly everything they currently do. As just one example, if state and local governments could not act on target 6.4 of the SDGs, that would make the Groundwater Management Act unenforceable and effectively end water conservation measures in Arizona. It's quite obvious that the partisan legislators that passed this bill don't have any understanding of the SDGs - they just wanted to show their opposition to anything that is "green" or "woke."


Here is the list of UN Sustainable Development Goals showing how broad their scope is.
sdgs.jpg
For more detailed descriptions of the SDGs, targets, and indicators - as well as a wealth of information about global progress (or lack thereof) in achieving the goals, check out the UN's Sustainable Development Goals website.

Please contact Governor Hobbs to encourage her to veto HB2788 before Monday.

Monday, April 1, 2024

Stop bills that make it harder to vote from going on the ballot


No new bills will be heard in committees, so there will be no Request to Speak this week. For a lot of the bad environmental bills, it looks like it will be mostly party line votes and hopefully, a veto by the Governor. Sadly, there are few positive bills moving. Legislators never heard bills to advance environmental justice, bills to limit groundwater pumping, bills to protect rivers and streams, bills to help address climate change, and bills to protect our air and water.  


Key concerns at this point in the session are measures that bypass the Governor and go directly to the ballot. There are several of those outstanding, including HCR2032 voting centers; precinct voting (Jones: B Parker, Smith, et al.). It would put a measure on the 2024 ballot that prohibits boards of supervisors from establishing voting centers to accommodate additional voting for a specific election as needed. It also eliminates no-excuse mail-in voting, limiting a method of voting used by 80% of Arizonans. If approved, this would result in lower voter turnout.

 

HCR2058 legislative districts; population; census; citizenship (Heap: Chaplik, Gillette, et al) would put a measure on the 2024 ballot to require a state census that the Independent Redistricting Commission (IRC) must use to determine legislative districts based on citizenship population. This is a direct attack on the IRC and would subvert US census data to dilute and attack communities.
 
Please call your senator and ask them to vote no on HCR2032 and HCR2058!
You can find numbers for senators here.

More info. here:

GOP wants to scrap Arizona early voting. The plan is 1 vote away from the November ballot

Saturday, March 23, 2024

Sign petitions to your legislators on bad bills for the environment

Save Water, Save Life with cracked soil and then lush desert vegetation in a water drop

Monday, March 18, 2024

Sneaky strike-everything amendments reword approved bills and other bad bills prohibit environmental actions @ AZ Legislature

Strike-everything sneaks in new bills

This week there are several strike-everything amendments. (Basically, a strike-everything is a bizarre rule in the state legislature that allows replacing all of the text of a bill that has gone through committee with completely new - and often unrelated - text.) This means you may need to change a previous RTS comment to reflect the new bill.

This week the Senate continued to advance many bad policies, including HCR2040, which passed along party lines.

HCR2040 public monies; prohibited expenditures (Smith: Biasiucci, Carbone, et al.) would place a measure on the 2024 ballot to prohibit the state or any political subdivision, including universities, to do anything to help reduce global temperatures, have a climate action plan, participate in anything related to reducing meat consumption, etc. It wraps this up with a bow related to prohibiting "furthering Marxist ideologies."

 

Tell your senator to vote no on HCR2040! You can find their phone number here.

Request to Speak on the following bills before they are heard in their respective committees.
Monday, March 18th


Senate Transportation, Technology, and Missing Children Committee at 2:00 PM 
  • HCR2049 ballot measures; challenges (Carter) will have a strike-everything amendment on freedom to move would put on the 2024 ballot a proposed constitutional amendment to prohibit limits on vehicle miles travelled or having any fee based on vehicle miles traveled. The latter is one of the ways to fund roads as gas taxes continue to dwindle. Limiting traffic can improve our air quality is part of the clean air plans. OPPOSE
Senate Finance and Commerce Committee at 2:00PM
  • HB2734 affordable housing; parking requirements; prohibition (now: public hearings; voting) (Ortiz: Biasiucci, Peña) will have a strike-everything amendment to limit public hearings on zoning ordinances. OPPOSE
Wednesday, March 20th

House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee at 2:00 PM 
  • SB1052 all-terrain vehicles; definition (Carroll: Farnsworth, Cook) increases the allowable weight for all-terrain vehicles from 2500 to 3000. Heavier vehicles do more damage and kick up more dust in unpaved areas. OPPOSE
House Municipal Oversight and Elections Committee at 2:00 PM
Members of the public may access a livestream of the meeting here.
  • SCR1041 ballot measures; challenges (Mesnard) refers a measure that allows challenges to proposed ballot measures by any person and earlier in the process -even before the election. Just another way to keep citizens' initiatives from getting on the ballot.  OPPOSE
Thursday, March 21st

NOTE: There are a bunch of strike everything amendments that haven't been posted yet, Please check back later in the week.