Wednesday, April 23, 2008
Letter from President about Mesa school librarians
For those of you who have not heard, Mesa Public Schools, Arizona’s largest school district recently announced a three-year plan to eliminate all school librarian positions as part of a cost-savings measure. Additionally, school districts around the state continue reducing library services in an effort to balance their budgets.
In response to this alarming situation "Fund Our Future Arizona," a coalition of parents, businesses and other partners/endorsers, has been formed to launch a statewide effort to raise awareness for school libraries. The Arizona Library Association has responded by becoming an official Charter Member of "Fund Our Future Arizona". A petition has begun circulating to provide Arizona citizens a forum to voice their support, which I strongly encourage all members to sign. I have attached a press release with further information and contacts.
Visit http://www.fundourfuturearizona.org for more information!
Please join me in an effort to support our libraries, schools, and students!
Monday, April 14, 2008
SB 1256 Property Tax Update
After several months of negotiations on another property tax proposal, the Senate held a vote on HB 2220: state equalization property tax repeal (J. Weiers) when Senator Ken Cheuvront (D-15) changed his vote to allow the measure to pass. The permanent repeal of the state's education property tax rate had been stalled due to division in the Senate Republican caucus. If approved by Governor Napolitano, the proposal would permanently establish the property tax repeal that was suspended for three years in 2006. It is unclear whether or not the Governor will sign the legislation.
Wednesday, April 9, 2008
Teacher-Librarians: Take Action in Virtual Library Legislative Day
Just one week from tomorrow on April 17, many librarians and library supporters will descend upon the Arizona State Legislature to demonstrate to our lawmakers just how important libraries are to our communities. Many battles are being waged in the Legislature this year, including minimizing cuts to the State Library, Archives, and Public Records and the new Archives building, and fighting the secondary property tax cap. While none of these issues are directly about school libraries or teacher-librarians, all of these issues either directly or indirectly impact school libraries and teacher-librarians.
This is why I am asking you to participate in Virtual Library Legislative Day.
You do not need to come to the Capitol. You do not need to take a personal day.
I am asking for a commitment of five minutes of your time. Five minutes for you to either call or email your two representatives and one senator and leave a message with his/her secretary.
I am asking you to leave this message:
I am a constituent of Representative/Senator __________. Arizona Revised Statute 15-362 allows school districts to hire anyone to operate a school library, regardless of training or preparation. Why are school libraries treated differently than classrooms in Arizona?
Imagine if each legislator received 10 calls about this on April 17. Imagine if they received 50! Imagine if they received 100!
It is up to you to make your voice heard on this important issue. Will YOU make the commitment to call on April 17?
Find your Representatives and Senator: http://tinyurl.com/3czx2l
Representative and Senator phone/email list: http://azleg.gov/MemberRoster.asp
ARS 15-362 http://www.azleg.gov/ars/15/00362.htm
Thursday, April 3, 2008
You are cordially invited to participate in
Library Legislative Day
When: 9 to 4 p.m., Thursday, April 17, 2008
Where: Administrative Conference Room (2nd Floor)
What: Call your Representatives and Senator to schedule a personal appointment
Why: If we don’t speak up for libraries, who will?
Bring: Library supporters, library board members, Friends of your library, and
Agenda
8:30 – 9:00 Registration – Pick up packets to deliver to legislators
9:00 – 9:15 Welcome and Introductions
Angela Creel-Erb, AzLA President
Senate President Timothy Bee (invited)
House Speaker James Weiers (invited)
9:15 – 9:30 Legislative Process
Mike Braun, Director, Legislative Council
9:30 – 9:55 Budget Process
Michael Hunter, Senior Policy Advisor for Budget & Finance
9:55 – 10:15 2008 Legislative Agenda
Brenda Brown, AzLALegislative Chair
Kristen Boilini, AzLA Lobbyist
10:15 – 11:30 Appointments with Legislators and Executive Staff
Appointments to be set by legislative day attendee in advance
11:30 – 1:00 Lunch with Legislators on the Senate Lawn
1:00 – 4:00 Appointments with Legislators and Executive Staff
Appointments to be set by legislative day attendee in advance
REGISTRATION FORM
THERE WILL BE A $10.00 REGISTRATION FEE FOR LEGISLATIVE DAY. THIS FEE WILL COVER YOUR BBQ LUNCH AND IS PAYABLE ONLY THE MORNING OF LEGISLATIVE DAY
Name: _____________________________________________________________________________________________
Library Represented: _________________________________________________________________________________
Address: ___________________________________________________________________________________________
City: ______________________________________________________________________________________________
Home Phone: ________________________________________ Work Phone: ____________________________________
E-mail: ____________________________________________________________________________________________
Legislative Dist. # ____________________ Number in Party: ______________________
Fax your registration to 480-782-2823
Monday, March 31, 2008
Info: SCR 1028 Prohibiting Public Gifts
Dear friends,
Last Wednesday, after receiving information from Community Food Bank of Tucson, written by Mark Clark a longtime advocate in Pima County, we became aware of a little known Senate Resolution to put a ballot initiative forward in AZ to amend the AZ Constitution to prohibit "public gifts, loans, donations or grants for ANY PUBLIC OR PRIVATE PURPOSE." This is SCR1028 (copy attached), sponsored by Senators Johnson, Cheuvront, Blendu and Gould. While we are told that the intention is to prevent public entities from giving away resources to private companies as means of incentives for them to do business in their communities or subdivisions, here at AAFB the language used in the bill put our red flags up immediately because we have very extensive public/private partnerships to deliver emergency and supplemental food services statewide. Without these partnerships – that include building, land, trucks, labor by prison and jail inmates, we would be hard-pressed to provide the level of services to needy Arizonans.
Today Mark Barnes, Laurie Foran and I met with Senator Debbie McCune-Davis, a member of the Senate Financial Institutions, Insurance, and Retirement Committee who heard this resolution a few weeks ago. While the Committee passed it on a 3-2 vote it has now gone to Senate Rules and is awaiting action there. Sen. McCune Davis at that hearing questioned the language of the bill as "being excessively broad." In speaking with her today, I brought up points such as:
* AZ has chosen to provide health and human services through a public/private partnership model. Excluding options to share space and resources could severely damage this type of service delivery.
* Many non-profits have benefitted from gifts of land, buildings, shared office space with any number of city, county, state or other subdivision of the state thereby enabling them to provide human and health service in a cost effective manner.
She is willing to go to Senate Leadership to ask that SCR1028 not be allowed to be put on the ballot due to the impact the wording could have on non-profit organizations in AZ. However, she would like a list of the relationships that are currently in place by organization or service sectors to show as an example of what could be impacted in the future, if a constitutional amendment such as this were approved.
Can you please help by providing information of this type to me to provide to Sen. McCune-Davis at your earliest possible convenience, but not later than next Friday 3/28/08, so that she can assist us in defeating SCR1028?
The types of examples we’re looking for are (this is just the beginning, not an exhaustive list):
A city or county that provides office space to a non-profit to provide some type of service for the public good
A city or county that gives land to a non-profit so that a building can be constructed to provide a service to the public
A city or county that provides the work of County Jail inmates to clean facilities or prepare facilities to be suitable for delivery of services to the public
State departments who are in partnership with non-profits to deliver public services (i.e. homeless shelters, domestic violence shelters, etc.)
Sen. McCune-Davis says we have a little time because Resolutions are not subject to the same time limitations as other bills in the Legislature. In fact, usually all the resolutions are gathered at one time and decided upon by the House & Senate Leadership, regarding which ones will move past the Rules Committee and to the next House of consideration and onto the ballot in November.
There may be other examples that will come to you, once you read the language of the resolution. Give me a call if you have any questions, but please send me any and all information you can by 3/28/08, close of business.
If we are not successful with this strategy, we may need to do some massive calling – phone & in person – to defeat this resolution BEFORE it gets on the ballot. You can just imagine the difficulty we’d have defeating this in a general election.
Thank you for your help, and I look forward to hearing from you.
P. S. If you know of others in the community you could pass this along to in order to get more input, please feel free to do so. Thank you.
Ginny
Ginny Hildebrand
Executive Director
Association of Arizona Food Banks
Request for Action to support Archives Building
Date: Mar 29, 2008 7:50 AM
Friends -
There is a nice, long article about the impact of the budget cuts on
the state archives building in the March 28 edition of the Arizona
Capitol Times. You have to be a subscriber and registered on the
Capitol Times website to read the entire article on-line, but you can
look at the headline here:
http://azcapitoltimes.com/
It is important that we leverage this publicity in two ways:
1. Write a letter to the Capitol Times in support of proper funding
for the state archives building. This means limiting the budget cut
to $2 million or less. If the cut remains at $3.5 million there will
not be enough money to move the documents into the new building. You
can submit a letter via e-mail to: editor@azcapitoltimes.com or fax
it to (602) 253-7636. In your letter remind folks how long it has
taken Arizona to construct the new building and what a waste it would
be not to be able to use it. Each day of delay means continued
deterioration of valuable historic documents and artifacts.
2. Contact your legislators. Reference the article in the Capitol
Times and tell them the same message. It is very important that they
hear from a large number of people on this. If you need contact
information for legislators, go the the ALIS website:
http://www.azleg.gov/alisStaticPages/HowToContactMember.asp
Thanks very much for all your hard work over the years. We are very
close but need a little extra push right now.
Thursday, March 20, 2008
Good News: HB 2586 Secondary Tax Limit - FAILED!
http://www.azleg.gov/DocumentsForBill.asp?Bill_Number=HB2586
THIRD READ
Vote Detail
DATE: 03/20/08
AYES: 22
NAYS: 34
NV: 4
EXC: 0
EMER AMEND: Y
RESULT: FAILED