PHOENIX — Legislative leaders are planning to pull the plug on the 2020 session, with the intent of not coming back to the Capitol to deal with outstanding financial and policy issues until January.
State lawmakers will vote May 1 to shut down the session, Senate President Karen Fann said Tuesday.
Legislators have been in recess since March 23 due to the pandemic, but had hoped to return to complete the session that started Jan. 13.
The plan had been not only to put the final touches on a budget for the new fiscal year but also to deal with some remaining hot-button measures. These range from changing water laws and re-regulating vacation rentals to ending social promotion in schools, passing higher gasoline taxes and deciding whether to bar transgender females from legally participating in high school and college athletics.
But the virus shows no clear sign of abating, with single-day deaths in the state hitting a peak of 21 on Tuesday, bringing the tally to more than 200. And with nonessential businesses shuttered and a stay-at-home order by Gov. Doug Ducey, the state’s revenue picture remains no more clear than it was when lawmakers recessed.
So, absent some need for a special session, Fann said lawmakers will be gone until a new session in January.
“The budget is pretty well secure right now,” Fann said, with lawmakers having adopted what amounts to an $11.8 billion “baseline” spending plan. That assumes continuation of all agencies with adjustments for growth in population and inflation.
Lawmakers did add $105 million before packing up last month both in direct funds for the Department of Health Services to deal with the virus as well as for aid to renters, the homeless and small business.
Meanwhile, legislative budget staffers said they cannot predict how bad the hit will be on state revenues from the shutdown of local businesses and the sharp drop in tourism.
The most recent estimate put the shortfall at $1.1 billion for the upcoming fiscal year. But Richard Stavneak, staff director of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee, said that figure could be as little as $600 million or as much as $1.6 billion.
Nor can they accurately determine how much more the state will have to spend as the recession being created is making more people eligible for government-funded programs like Medicaid. The most recent figures showed enrollment grew by 2% in just a single month.
“There’s no way we’re really going to have a good handle on any new numbers until we really know where we’re going to go with this,” Fann said.
“Are we going to be able to start opening things up little by little over the next couple of weeks?” she asked. “Or is it going to take longer.”
Anyway, Fann said, the state is in line to get about $2.8 billion in federal aid due to the pandemic, something she said can be used to plug a lot of holes until January.
The state also is expected to end this budget year June 30 with a surplus of close to $1 billion, with a nearly identical amount in its “rainy-day” fund.
Not everyone is on board with the plan.
“This is the most God-awful, embarrassing thing we’ve ever done,” said Rep. Kelly Townsend, R-Mesa.
“What kind of policy is not going to happen this year because we decided we were afraid?”
Townsend said there’s no reason lawmakers cannot meet online to finish the session.
She pointed out that the House already has set up a process that allowed several lawmakers to vote without being on the floor.
“We managed to do it for the budget,” Townsend said. “But we can’t manage to do it for the rest of the people’s business?”
Townsend, who was part of the Monday demonstration at the Capitol demanding an end to the governor’s shutdown and stay-at-home orders, said that lawmakers can be creative, just as have other businesses.
“Walmart managed,” she said, remaining open with controls.
“Why? Because Walmart is considered essential,” Townsend said. “But the people’s business is not essential enough?”
“Literally, there were hundreds of bills hanging out there,” Fann acknowledged.
Also dead would be various proposals to cut taxes, including a plan by Ducey to eliminate income taxes on the pensions of retired military.
Fann, however, said the fate of these bills left in the process is no different than it would have been had lawmakers gone through a full session and left issues unresolved.
“They’re dead for this year, just as they would be in any year” when the session ends without action. “And next year we’ll take them up again,” she said.
Fann acknowledged that many of the issues had been thoroughly debated and probably had merit.
“But good bills die every year,” she said.
And there was a practical matter: Who decides, in what would be the short time remaining before the end of the fiscal year on June 30, which bills should get attention.
“Everybody thought their bills were important and critical,” Fann said. “It was just decided there was no way we could feasibly do it and be fair with everybody and actually get things accomplished.”
And then there is the reality of working against a deadline on issues that could prove controversial.
“The longer we get in to session, the worse the politics are getting,” Fann said.
That goes beyond the normal partisan bickering. This is an election year, with even some intramural spats anticipated among Republicans vying for the same seats.
“So are we really going to get anything accomplished?” Fann asked.
She said the prime goal is to “get the state back up and running. Then we can work on the stuff next year.”
Townsend, however, has another theory about why legislative leaders want to end the session.
She pointed out that Arizona law prohibits legislators from raising money from lobbyists during the legislative session. This is an election year.
That prohibition would go away May 1 if the session is over, providing time for seeking donations before the Aug. 3 primary.
“We should go hang our heads in shame,” Townsend said.
Fann said the decision has nothing to do with fundraising.
Ending the formal session May 1 would also resolve another potential controversy for lawmakers.
With the session only in recess, all 90 of them have been entitled to collect their daily allowance seven days a week even though there have been no sessions since March 23. That amounts to $35 a day for lawmakers from Maricopa County and $60 a day for out-of-county legislators.
Photos for April 11: Tucson gets by during Coronavirus Pandemic
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Susan Hillman chats with her mother Betty Hillman via telephone, April 9, 2020, Tucson, Ariz. Eighty-five year old Betty Hillman is in long term skilled care and Susan is unable to visit due to COVID-19 restrictions on nursing home facilities.
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Susan Hillman chats with her mother Betty Hillman near a photo of Betty and her husband, Susan's dad, Bill, circa 2105, April 9, 2020, Tucson, Ariz. Eighty-five year old Betty Hillman is in long term skilled care and Susan is unable to visit due to COVID-19 restrictions on nursing home facilities.
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Ben Forbes, left, owner of Forbes Meat Company, helps Jeronimo "Mo" Madril, right owner and executive chef of Geronimo's Revenge, wrap up tortilla's for to-go carnitas for Forbes Meat Company and Geronimo's Revenge's "Carnitas for the community" at Thunder Canyon Brewery, 220 E. Broadway Blvd., in Tucson, Ariz., on April 6, 2020. Forbes Meat Company and Geronimo's Revenge partnered to help the restaurant community by offering free carnitas to those affected by the Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19). They will be making to go carnitas every Monday in April starting at 2pm until all the to go packs, roughly 60, are all gone. Forbes wanted to find a way to help out the restaurant community. "They are struggling and my business is exploding," said Forbes.
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David Clark, left, out of work bartender, and Jeronimo "Mo" Madril, owner and executive chef of Geronimo's Revenge, practice social distancing while waiting to give out carnitas for Forbes Meat Company and Geronimo's Revenge's "Carnitas for the community" at Thunder Canyon Brewery, 220 E. Broadway Blvd., in Tucson, Ariz., on April 6, 2020. Forbes Meat Company and Geronimo's Revenge partnered to help the restaurant community by offering free carnitas to those affected by the Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19). They will be making to go carnitas every Monday in April starting at 2pm until all the to go packs, roughly 60, are all gone.
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Steve Tracy, Thunder Canyon Brewery co-owner and brewer, fills up 16oz bottles of locally made hand sanitizer at Thunder Canyon Brewery, 220 E. Broadway Blvd., in Tucson, Ariz., on April 6, 2020. Thunder Canyon Brewery, along with a few other local distilleries, are making United States Food and Drug Administration approved hand sanitizer for hospitals, first responders and the public in response to Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19). "Whatever I have, I am turning into hand sanitizer," said Tracy. "We are going to keep making it as much as we can."
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Steve Tracy, Thunder Canyon Brewery co-owner and brewer, fills up 16oz bottles of locally made hand sanitizer at Thunder Canyon Brewery, 220 E. Broadway Blvd., in Tucson, Ariz., on April 6, 2020. Thunder Canyon Brewery, along with a few other local distilleries, are making United States Food and Drug Administration approved hand sanitizer for hospitals, first responders and the public in response to Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19). "Whatever I have, I am turning into hand sanitizer," said Tracy. "We are going to keep making it as much as we can."
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David Sbarra, a psychology professor at the University of Arizona, points his webcam at his children Margot, 9, and Mateo, 12, as he begins his introduction of his office hours for a class he now conducts over Zoom in his living room while teaching from home, on April 7, 2020.
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Ben Elias, manager at Westbound, center, helps Dustin Schaber with his pickup order on April 8, 2020. Due to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) only two customers are allowed in the shop, located at the MSA Annex, at the same time and all orders are to-go.
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Laura Tanzer, a local fashion designer, posted on Facebook that she will make masks for $5.00 each on April 5. Tanzer thought she would receive a couple of dozen orders, but, within 24 hours she heard from over 200 people. Tanzer is now working out of her shop in downtown Tucson making masks that also has a filter sowed into them. Tanzer is wearing one of her masks as she sows on April 8, 2020.
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Oro Valley Hospital chief administration officer Erinn Oller talks with Fang, a local organizer with the Chinese-American COVID-19 Relief AZ group, which donated 6,000 masks, on April 9, 2020. Additional mask donations are planned as soon as shipments arrive.
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Healthcare workers line up for their 2 free Sonoran hot dogs and a drink from BK Carne Asada & Hot Dogs in the parking lot of St. Mary's Hospital on April 10, 2020. The owner, Benny Galaz, is giving free food to healthcare workers at Tucson area hospitals for the next several weeks as a way to say thank you for their hard work during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak.
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Benny Galaz, owner of BK Carne Asada & Hot Dogs, cooks up Sonoran hot dogs in the parking lot of St. Mary's Hospital on April 10, 2020. Galaz is giving free food to healthcare workers at Tucson area hospitals for the next several weeks as a way to say thank you for their hard work during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak.
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Healthcare workers line up for their 2 free Sonoran hot dogs and a drink from BK Carne Asada & Hot Dogs in the parking lot of St. Mary's Hospital on April 10, 2020. The owner, Benny Galaz, is giving free food to healthcare workers at Tucson area hospitals for the next several weeks as a way to say thank you for their hard work during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak.
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A man uses the taped off exercise station in Reid Park as an anchor for his band workout, April 8, 2020, Tucson, Ariz.
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Alicia Roseanna, 9, fourth grader at Esperanza Elementary School, grabs a sheet of paper while listening to her teacher, Rachel Watson, and her classmates inside her home in Tucson, Ariz. during Watson's online class on April 7, 2020. Due to the Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) closing down schools and universities, teachers and students have been forced to schedule and participate in classes online for the remainder of the school year.
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COVID-19 survivor, Glen Reed, poses for a photo looking out from the room he's using for isolation from his family in his home, April 10, 2020, Tucson, Ariz. Reed spent nearly a month in the hospital including weeks in ICU on a ventilator.
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ER and EMS workers run through a drill practicing how to process an incoming patient experiencing a respiratory emergency at the Tucson Medical Center's Emergency Room, on April 10, 2020.
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Tucson Fire Paramedic personnel prepare to run a drill at the Tucson Medical Center's Emergency Room, on April 10, 2020.
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The CDC recommends Americans wear a facial covering when out in public, part of an effort to reduce the spread of the virus that causes COVID-19. Above, shopping for spring blooms at Tucson’s Green Things Nursery.
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Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) signs taped onto dorms at the Babcock Dorms. The rooms located at 1717 E Speedway Boulevard may be used to house hospital workers from Banner - University Medical Center if they need to be quarantined due to COVID-19.
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Alex Swain, a member of Beloved in the Desert - Tucson's chapter of the Episcopal Service Corps, packs the trunk of his housemate's SUV in the parking lot of Fry's on 2480 N Swan Road after grocery shopping for an elderly man, on April 3, 2020. Swain and his housemates have volunteered to shop for elderly and at risk populations as people quarantine and stay at home during the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.
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Julisa Montano, a bus driver with Sunnyside Unified School District, gathers up the last few meals to hand out to students outside of Gallego Primary School, on April 7, 2020. The school district is distributing meals and has wifi available for students to use for school.
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A table is taped off at Fred Enke Golf Course, 8251 E. Irvington Rd., in Tucson, Ariz., on April 5, 2020 due to Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19). With a rise in the amount of people participating in golf, due to Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19), Tucson City Golf is taking extra measures to keep people safe such as sanitizing golf carts after each use and social distancing.
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Rich DelVecchio, a Fred Enke Golf Course employee, sanitizes a golf cart. Course revenues at Tucson’s city-owned golf properties are up nearly 28% from the same period last year.
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Golfers practice social distancing while on the driving range at Fred Enke Golf Course, 8251 E. Irvington Rd., in Tucson, Ariz., on April 5, 2020. With a rise in the amount of people participating in golf, due to Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19), Tucson City Golf is taking extra measures to keep people safe such as sanitizing golf carts after each use and social distancing.