Sunday, November 22, 2009

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Janet Napolitano is Making Ends Meet in Fast-Growing Arizona

Posted October 30, 2008

Janet Napolitano has a familiar problem. Since 2002, when she became the first Democratic governor of Arizona in 12 years, Napolitano has been putting her fast-growing state's fiscal house in order. After turning a $1 billion deficit into a $1.5 billion surplus, she won re-election in a landslide. Then, the housing bubble burst, and Arizona, along with at least 22 other states, found itself staring into a budgetary void. Earlier this year, Napolitano was forced to drain the state's rainy-day fund to close a $1.2 billion budget gap, only to see the credit crunch create another $700 million shortfall this fall. She talked with U.S. News about the fiscal crisis sweeping the states. Excerpts:

With tax revenues evaporating and no housing bubble propping up the economy, how serious is the situation in the states?
It's quite serious, in part because no one can predict when it is going to end. In Arizona, we have underlying confidence that we will come out of this. Our population continues to grow; it's a great place to live. But historically, our economy has been tied to housing, so when the housing bubble burst, California, Arizona, Nevada, Florida—those states got hit early and particularly hard. Other states are now joining us.

You imposed a state hiring freeze in February and recently froze all state contracts over $50,000. Why?
I wanted to make sure that we were not simply signing on contract extensions without somebody really thinking through "Is this a contract that we need to continue to fulfill the mission-critical functions of government?" It's not that we're not approving any contracts over $50,000, but they now have to go through a justification analysis outside the particular agency to make sure we're doing everything we can to rein in and control costs.

Why is the state tax revenue picture so grim right now?
One of the challenges for us has been the shifty nature of this. You don't know when the credit crunch is going to break open enough so consumers start spending again. When a state budget, as ours is, is half dependent on sales tax and people stop buying, at some point, they're going to start buying again, but you don't really know when and how fast. You don't know when you've hit bottom on housing. You don't know what the federal government is going to do by way of stimulus. You don't know how the global economy is going to react, and you don't know what the effect of the $700 billion [federal] bailout is going to be.

States in the past have had to raise taxes to close budget gaps. Will you?
I'm not going to propose a general tax increase. I think what we need to be looking for is stimulus.

What kind of stimulus from the federal government would help you?
To be a true stimulus, it has to be something that goes right into the economy and helps people. I think the first stimulus, which was the check in people's pockets, was kind of nice but very short-lived. I'm hopeful that when Congress and the new president really look at this, they will allocate money for infrastructure investment, they'll allocate money for Medicaid, which would allow us to make sure we don't increase the number of uninsured. I hope they understand they're going to have to do something with the extension of unemployment benefits and food stamps. You've got to cover, in the short term, working people who are beginning to fall through the safety net.

How much have your efforts to curb illegal immigration affected your state's economy?
I think it's impossible to tell because our employer sanctions law went into effect at the same time the housing bubble was bursting and the national economy was starting to sink. We do believe that for a variety of reasons, the number of illegal workers in Arizona has gone down. The question will be, "Will there be a labor shortage once the economy starts coming back?" We simply don't know the answer.

You recently sent a bill to the federal government asking for $500 million for policing and jailing illegal immigrants. Do you think that check is in the mail?
There's a federal law that says they're supposed to reimburse states for the cost of incarcerating illegal immigrants. When I learned this, I said, "Well, are they paying us?" It turns out they're paying us pennies on the dollar. So, I've been sending the attorney general of the United States a bill for uncompensated costs, and I've started tacking on interest and a late fee because I'm getting really irritated. It's a half a billion dollars! In a state like Arizona, where your annual budget is $10 billion, that's a lot of money.

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Reader Comments

Janets way to save money, fire state employees who gets sick or go to doctor.

Working for the state sense Janet Napolitano has fully spread her control has become as bad as any historical "Sweat shop". Slavery is accualy more accurate only rather then steel chains they use mental abuse to maintain control. Much like an abusive spouse whos victim is traped by the fear and confusion. When the abuse goes to far and someone needs medical care or dies they are swept aside. everyone else is told what to say and threatened with problems above loosing their jobs. If you have a doctors appoitment you are not aloud to go. even if it means your life. If you have a doctors note for your boss that states you must be seen by a specialest as a mater of life and death you are not permited to leave and your job is threatened. Your expected to do more work then can possably be done and told you cant stay late so you do but don't get paid for staying late. You have to arive early and give up lunch but dont tell and dont count the time because if you do your job is threatened. If someone does tell everyone else is ordered to lie of loose their job. Janet Napolitano has done a wonderful job on the surface. Now talk to people that work for her state jobs such as DES FAA employees and you will find what I say is true. My girlfriend has been with DES for 4 years and we will finialy find out if the problem we have beleaved to be cancer and the doctor beleaves is cancer really is cancer. If it is the two appoitments the managers at the chandler DES offices should be charged with attempted murder, at least I hope it only ends in attempted. Oh ya and by the way sense finding that her going to the specialest was life or death they have asked her to resign the from her position of 4 years as a case worker. They want this by Jan 8 2008 the day she finialy sees the specialest. I wish I knew a lawyer for this but I doubt any one would win in a state where the laws mean nothing and the united states constitution is mute.

We must send a harsh message to anybody who violates immigration laws in the name of greed. HEAVY FINES, CONFISCATION OF BUSINESS ASSETS AND PRISON--ALL THREE SHOULD BE ENACTED.

ARIZONA's Proposition 202 is a deception, placed on the ballot to overide the States immigration laws on the books. READ CAREFULLY!

Incidentally, there is an estimated 37 million, NOT 13 MILLION according to the Tucson sector Border Patrol union local 2544 (with an additional half-million coming every year) a massive financial impact on our economy by importing the worlds poor.

2. The Americans who are losing jobs to cheap immigrant labor. In a 1996 study, a Rice University economist estimated that illegal aliens were then displacing 730,000 American workers a year.

3. The costs to taxpayer for welfare, medical services, education, law enforcement and incarceration for "illegal immigrants" and their dependents -and thousands of State, county welfare is estimated at more than a Trillion dollars.

US taxpayers are supporting parasite businesses that hire illegal aliens. The middle class already overburdened with war appropriation funds, is still force to pay for the education, free health-care and Federal, state welfare handouts for illegal criminals.

SIGN UP FOR THE SAVE ACT(H.R.4088) at www.numbersusa.com.

SIGN JUDICIAL WATCH, A LEGAL ORGANIZATIONS PETITION, to stop Sanctuary Cities & States. www.sanctuarybusters.org/?source

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