PHOENIX β Gov. Katie Hobbs has tapped a former Democratic lawmaker who has advocated for higher taxes and against Republican-proposed tax cuts to head the Arizona Department of Child Safety.
But David Lujan told Capitol Media Services on Monday he hopes that doesnβt become an issue when he is screened by a special Senate panel for the job.
Hobbs chose Lujan, who is executive director of the Childrenβs Action Alliance, after she withdrew the nomination last month of Matthew Stewart to be DCS director. That occurred even before he went in front of the Senate Committee on Director Nominations.
The governor said it was βa decision that was made for the best interests of all parties involved.β But Sen. Jake Hoffman, R-Queen Creek, who chairs that panel, said there were βtroubling eventsβ involving Stewart that suggested Hobbs wasnβt properly vetting her nominees.
Whether her new pick has better luck remains to be seen.
βWeβre concerned with making sure that we have qualified candidates that are thoroughly, accurately and honestly vetted for these positions,β Hoffman said Monday.
And he called DCS βone of the most important agencies that we have.β
βIt takes care of vulnerable children in our state,β Hoffman said. βSo weβre going to be looking at qualifications that are relevant to doing that job.β
In naming Lujan, Hobbs cited his experience as president and CEO of Childrenβs Action Alliance, describing it as βa nonpartisan voice for children at the state Capitol.β She also mentioned his time as a state senator and representative and that he was an attorney for a nonprofit organization that provided legal services for abused and neglected children and was the chief administrator of the Arizona State University Preparatory Academy, a public charter school.
What is not in the governorβs news release is Lujanβs role as executive director of the Arizona Center for Economic Progress, a separate arm of Childrenβs Action Alliance.
That organization was at the forefront of a 2020 initiative to impose a 3.5% surcharge on income taxes owed by individuals making more than $250,000 a year. Voters approved the measure, only to have the levy and the $800 million a year it would have raised declared it was not collectable after a court challenge by Republican lawmakers.
And Lujan has stayed active in the tax arena. Just last month he opposed a GOP-backed measure to cut the corporate income tax rate nearly in half that legislative budget analysts said eventually could cut state revenues by nearly $670 million a year.
Lujan said he hopes his role in opposing Republican efforts to cut taxes does not affect his nomination.
βProtecting children should be a nonpartisan issue,β he said.
Hoffman, at least for the time being, appears to agree that the screening process should focus on the nominee and not his political background.
βWe need to make sure that we have folks who understand the job, that can do the job, that can collaborate and communicate not only inside the agency but also outside providers,β he said, noting that DCS has contracts with many private entities who provide direct services to children, including group homes.
βWe have lots of vulnerable children in this state,β Hoffman continued. βWe need to make sure they get taken care of.β
Prior to this year, gubernatorial nominees were screened by existing Senate panels who have expertise in that area. So a pick for the health chief would go to the Health Committee; the Public Safety Committee would review someone named to head the Department of Public Safety.
All that changed this year when Senate President Warren Petersen, R-Gilbert, formed the nominations panel and tapped Hoffman to chair the committee, with three Republicans and two Democrats. Hobbs has made it clear she is not happy with the process.
Her frustration came out after the committee voted against her pick of Pima County Health Director Theresa Cullen to head the Department of Health Services. The governor withdrew Cullenβs nomination, though the full Senate went ahead anyway and voted to reject her.
βThe committee has made it very clear that theyβre not interested in seriously vetting my nominations,β the governor said last week of Hoffmanβs panel.
βTheyβre interested in carrying out the personal vendetta against me and using my name as proxy to do that,β she said, accusing Hoffman of βcreating a stage for his political theater.β
Hoffman on Monday said he would not respond to the governorβs statements.
βIβm just not going to get into the weeds and name-call and whatnot like Katie Hobbs has done,β he said. βWeβre focused on doing the work of the people and thatβs what weβre going to keep doing.β
No date has been set for a hearing on Lujan as Hoffman said he has not yet seen the required paperwork from the governor.