Gov. Ducey won't block Pima County, Tucson curfews for now
County Administrator Chuck Huckelberry told Capitol Media Services that the ordinance is not an effort to pick a fight with the governor over the scope of his powers
PHOENIX β Gov. Doug Ducey isnβt going to try to block Tucson and Pima County from enforcing mandatory curfews even though it is in direct violation of his executive order, at least not now.
And that could embolden other Arizona communities to strike out on their own.
βHe disagrees with the policy and he doesnβt think itβs the right approach,β said press aide C.J. Karamargin following Tuesdayβs 3-2 vote by Pima County supervisors to impose a countywide 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. curfew until the countyβs COVID-19 infection rate subsides.
But for the moment, Ducey is going to simply disregard the fact that Tucson more than a week ago and now Pima County have gone their own way on a local curfew. Asked specifically whether his boss would challenge those moves, Karamargin said βwe have not made a decision yet.β
The county edict, which follows a similar one imposed by Tucson more than a week ago, directly conflicts with a May 12 order issued by Ducey under what he said are his emergency powers.
βNo county, city or town may make or issue any order, rule or regulation that conflicts with or is in addition to the policy, directives or intent of this executive order,β the governor mandated.
He did back off a bit in June, allowing local governments to impose mask mandates after Tucson Mayor Regina Romero threatened to go ahead on her own and provoke a legal fight.
County Administrator Chuck Huckelberry told Capitol Media Services that the ordinance is not an effort to pick a fight with the governor over the scope of his powers. He pointed out that Ducey enacted his preemption in May.
βOur view is that weβre in an entirely different place than in May with regard to the level of infection and the community spread of COVID-19,β Huckelberry said. And what that means, he said, is that the county, looking at the issue from a public health perspective, does not think that Duceyβs order applies.
In fact, Huckelberry said, things are even different from when the governor allowed local governments to impose requirements on people to wear masks in public.
At that time, he said, the county had a βpositivity rateβ of 253 for every 100,000 residents, a figure that represents the number of people testing positive for the virus.
βToday our positivity rate for the first three days of this new week is at 1,131,β Huckelberry said.
βItβs a completely different environment,β he continued. βOur hospital capacity is probably less than maybe Maricopa and our infections in the daily count donβt seem to be abating.β
Photos: Tucsonans Don Masks to help curb Coronavirus