Pima County Supervisor Ray Carrollâs impending retirement raises the possibility of something almost unimaginable before.
Some would call it a dream, others â a nightmare.
Are you ready for board Chair Ally Miller?
For three years, Carroll and Miller, the only Republicans on the five-member board, have been bitter rivals. Now, Miller is aligned with candidate Marla Closen, who hopes to fill Carrollâs seat.
Two other candidates are challenging board members Sharon Bronson and Ramon Valadez. If Miller and two others win, they could create a sort of tea party majority, with Miller leading the way.
My experience and research tells me that would be a bad thing.
I have appreciated the best of what Miller has brought to the board in her stormy first three years after replacing Ann Day: Skepticism about business as usual in Pima County government. The latest example, of course, is her valid questioning of the plan to build a headquarters for World View Enterprises in a county-funded incentive deal that would be paid back in 20 years.
But the problem is her healthy skepticism comes wrapped in unhealthy cynicism, self-centeredness and paranoia that I think would make a Miller-run county board disastrous.
Consider the phrase âdamaging the brand.â I learned of this phrase recently and it helped me understand previously incomprehensible aspects of Millerâs years â mainly, why she makes so many whacky accusations along with the handful of pointed, accurate ones. In other words, why sheâs so consistently negative about Pima County.
Itâs all about damaging the brand. The brand, in this phrase, is the county government in all its aspects. And the idea is that if she can adequately damage the countyâs image, voters will push out the board majority and longtime administrator Chuck Huckelberry with them.
Hereâs the first sentence of an email Miller wrote to fellow opponents of Novemberâs bond elections soon after those ballot issues lost.
âIâm still not sure they realize I have been setting the table for 3 years damaging their brand and setting the table for 2016,â she wrote Nov. 6. âI thought they were beginning to figure that o [sic] ... but it is good they seem to be oblivious.â
I asked Jeannie Davis, whom Miller fired as chief of staff in late December, if âdamaging the brandâ was a phrase and concept used during her 21 months in the office. She confirmed that but would not elaborate, simply sending me this statement:
âI loved my job, was dedicated and worked tirelessly to support Supervisor Miller in my role. While her management style was contrary to my professional experience, I look forward to new opportunities and wish her the best.â
Former Miller aide Joe Cuffari didnât know the phrase âdamaging the brand,â but when I spoke with him last week, he said the concept was very familiar.
âThe idea was there of âLetâs not work for the constituents, but letâs try to bring Pima County down,ââ he said. âHer agenda was just to get herself re-elected and get the other supervisors out.â
That single-minded focus has benefited us at times. She was right, I thought, when she successfully called for an end to supervisors using their office budgets as a sort of slush fund, passing on excess amounts as grants to favored local charities. I have also agreed with her that the county is buying up and accumulating too much real estate.
But more often, she has made accusations that caused some damage, and when they were proved groundless, simply moved on to the next accusation.
When I talked to him Friday, Carroll put it this way: âShe might have 100 conspiracies that sheâs thinking exist, but only one in 100 actually exists.â
Miller, by the way, did not return my phone call or email messages.
One of my favorite conspiracies has been Millerâs repeated contention that Raytheon Missile Systems does not actually want the buffer zone that the county created through re-routing a road and buying property near the companyâs plant. The idea was to give the company room to expand so any future growth would not go out of state, as the last big project did.
Miller said this in 2014 but has made similar comments a refrain whenever Raytheon comes up: âAs a voting member of this board, one would think that the Raytheon members who want this road moved so badly would have contacted me directly.â
But some accusations have gone further: Twice Miller has taken accusations of wrongdoing by fellow board members to the Arizona Attorney Generalâs Office for investigation. And twice, the Republican-run AGâs office has said, âNo thanks.â
Some of those employed by Millerâs office describe an erratic atmosphere. One moment, Miller would be happily working with the staff, the next minute, yelling at them and slamming doors.
âIt was a tough environment,â Cuffari said. âYou never knew what you were going to get.â
Cuffari said he worked with Miller for 45 minutes one morning, then a while later, she told him he was fired.
The turnover in her office has been astounding. As Carroll put it: âIâve had less employees in 20 years than sheâs had in three.â
These negative views of Millerâs performance as a boss are common but not universal. Sergio Mendez worked for Miller for a short time in 2014 and found a good atmosphere.
âEverything was fine. I never felt like I was terrified to go to work every day,â he said.
Mendez and others reported much of the work of the office consisted of going line-by-line through Huckelberryâs memos, budget documents and county-board agendas. The accusations that those searches produced have been the substance of Millerâs tenure, allowing her to pursue a âdamage the brandâ approach.
Another of Millerâs supporters, Gini Crawford, received the post-bond-election email and didnât understand that reference to brand-damaging, but she does think the county has an image problem.
The difference between Crawfordâs view and mine is that she sees the problem as strictly the countyâs making.
âThat lack of trust in Pima County is something they have done themselves,â said Crawford, who is also Closenâs campaign manager.
Crawford said Closen, Kim DeMarco, who is challenging Bronson, and Richard Hernandez, who is challenging Ramon Valadez, donât plan on running as a slate, but they are loose allies.
All it would take is two of those three challengers winning, along with a Miller victory to turn âdamaging the brandâ into something more consequential â undermining the operation of our local government.



