Tucson Citizen.com
Caveat Lector - Politics, Government and the Free Press – by Mark B. Evans

Good luck in 2010, you’re going to need it

by on Dec. 28, 2009, under Politics

If you thought 2009 was a sick year, wait until you get a load of 2010.

Arizona was seriously ill in 2009 but it will go on life support in 2010.

It’s not that we want to pour a cold bucket of water on all the New Year’s good wishes our fellow citizens will offer each other this week and next, but the fact is there’s going to be little Happy about the New Year.

To recap 2009, the state budget in January, which is halfway through the fiscal year, was still out of whack by $2 billion. The Legislature cut $1.5 billion and rolled the rest into this fiscal year. This fiscal year’s budget, which we’re halfway through, was out of whack by $4 billion, but $1 billion from the federal economic stimulus bill and a (still pending) sale of state buildings, lowered that to about $2 billion. Some legislative tinkering the past few weeks whittled it to $1.5 billion.

The result of those cuts was less money for schools, universities and social services. As the recession deepened in Arizona in 2009, putting a quarter-million Arizonans out of work, state government contracted and offered those out-of-work thousands a social safety net chopped full of holes.

At the local level, municipalities dependent on sales taxes discovered the folly of basing government funding on a fickle tax that rises and falls with the economic tide.

Now, rather than being bulwarks for their people against the devastation of unemployment and underemployment, they’re adding to the economic misery by laying off staff and cutting services.

As 2010 dawns this week it would be great to think the worst is behind us. It’s not.

While the rest of the country slowly climbs out of the recession next year, state economists predict Arizona’s economy will continue to fall; not hitting bottom until near the end of 2010 or perhaps early 2011.

And as with this past year, don’t look to the state to do much about it. The Arizona budget can’t be balanced. Federal and voter mandates require the spending of $6 billion on health care for the poor and on K-12 education. The state will only take in about $6.4 billion in taxes. There are numerous vital functions of government that will have no funding, such as imprisoning criminals, investigating child abuse, certifying teachers and issuing licenses to doctors and nurses. How the state is going to function next year is a mystery.

The current batch of legislators has repeatedly failed to refer to voters a measure of reforms necessary to extricate the state from the spending mandates. They’re either too craven to do what needs to be done, or too gleeful that the state is in this mess.

It is highly likely that much of what we have come to expect from our government, schools, prisons, courts, parks, business regulation and so on, will be vastly curtailed or eliminated this year.

The state’s Republicans have long advocated for limited government. Arizona is going to find out what that looks like in 2010.

Meanwhile, at the local level, layoffs will be legion and brutal fights over tax increases will tie up county governments.

Counties have mostly escaped the budget morass the past two years because they rely on property taxes that are collected on valuations that lag 18 months behind the current fiscal year.

The real estate bubble finally bursts for counties this budget year. They are faced with tax collections that will be 15 percent or more below what they took in last year.

They will either have to cut staff and services or raise taxes. Those fights should be brutal.

As we ring in 2010, perhaps a more fitting salutation for Arizonans Friday than “Happy New Year” is “Good luck in 2010 (‘cause you’re gonna need it).”

More in Pol. & Govt.:

Cancer In The Water

  • tiponeill

    Welcome to the new Alabama – now let’s re-elect Republicans in 2010 and see how low we can sink.
    Maybe we can become a Libertarian Paradise, with no government at all :)

  • Entropy

    As a state employee , we’ve been feeling the heat of the economic downturn and budget problems. On the outside, it looks fine, but internally, it’s a friggin mess. We’ve already had mass layoffs, and might expect another round because, just as you said, halfway thru the current fiscal year, it still didn’t balance.
     
    Face it, we need to RAISE taxes. That’s the bottom line that will affect our bottom line. *shrugs* 
     
    Anyway… I don’t mean to sound like chicken little, but looking at our country’s past… we are so young compared to the rest of the world. Like a candle, we burned the brightest, but also the fastest. Add to that we where also burning at both ends. 
     
    I hope we make it.

  • leftfield

    It’s gonna be ugly, but it’s gonna be interesting at the same time.  The only possible silver lining is that we will all get to see in full fruition the society that the reactionaries have been promoting as ideal lo these many years.  I hope this finally puts the stake through the heart of their evil designs.  Unfortunately, real people are already suffering with no relief in sight. 

  • meatsauce

    Suh is coming…….and he’s not happy. (cue the sountrack from Jaws).
    Fear the Suh-nami!!!!!!!
    Huskers 34-10

  • y

    kick out all of the illegals and stop paying for all of their attempts to become a citizen by having babies.

    and don’t put them in jail for crimes that they commit. because we have to pay for them in jail.

    keep all of the murderers and rapists and dui drunks in jail and let the marijuana stoners go. they stimulate the economy by having the munchies.

    also how fair is it that us citizens have to pay 45 to 100 dollars for a little card or book so that we can cross the border and shop and all they have to do is climb under a fence

  • Ferraribubba

    It’s just one more reason why der Frau and I left the Old Pueblo with all it’s problems in 2005 and moved to rural Arkansas.  We saw this mess coming back then. sold our old our house in an up market, moved back here and bought a similiar house on 2 acres. 3brms, 3 bths, fpl, nice back deck next to a 14,000 acre lake for 1/3 the price of the casita and 1/3 the taxes.
    We’ve got 3 months supply of food, enough weapons and ammo to provide both protection and food on the table for years. Enough fish and game to feed the town for the forseeable future too.
    I feel that we as a nation might be up the creek without a paddle soon, if not already.
    If our beloved POTUS Obama completes his 4-year term, he will bankrupt us. (You can buy $100 Trillion Dollar Zimbabuie notes on eBay for $2.99.) It may be coming here, friends.
    But, on the other hand, if he doesn’t finish his term, we will see civil uprisings the likes of which we have never seen before. Not even the War Beteen the States could match this one.
    I covered the Watts Riots in 1965, and I’ve seen anarchy up close and personal. Rows of dead bodies in the street, waiting to be picked up. Burnt out blocks of buildings, overturned cars and trucks, looted liquior stores, etc. Not pretty sights.
    Hell, I was even a little closer to real sniper fire that Hillary was in Bosnia or wherever. <g>
    I’m here and ready because, God forbid, If it does happen, I owe it to myself and my family.
    Yer pal, Ferrari Bubba
     

    • leftfield

      Arkansas is cheap and, outside of the cities, pretty darn white.