Gov. Doug Ducey speaks Monday to the Arizona Legislature in his final State of the State speech.

PHOENIX โ€” Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey wants a major financial investment to get students who have fallen behind due to COVID-19 back on track.

In his final State of the State speech, the governor also told lawmakers Monday he wants:

$1 billion to help secure a lasting and secure supply of water;

Funds to accelerate the widening of the last stretch of Interstate 10 between Chandler and Casa Grande that is now just two lanes in each direction;

Provide additional state dollars to families that take in relatives who otherwise would wind up in foster care;

Ensure that victims do not have to pay the costs of processing the โ€œrape kitsโ€™โ€™ designed to help find those who are guilty.

Ducey also promoted what he said is a major program to finally secure the border.

But much of what he is proposing has nothing to do with โ€” or is in the control of โ€” the state. Instead the governor wants the stateโ€™s two senators to grind all congressional business to a halt until there is approval of what he said is a comprehensive federal program, including walls and physical barriers.

โ€œThey work,โ€™โ€™ he said.

In addressing education, the governor said some parents dealt with the pandemic and school closures by moving their children to different schools, creating micro-schools or even home schooling.

โ€œBut other families have seen their kids fall behind,โ€™โ€™ the governor said. And he laid much of the blame on the school districts with whom he has fought over their efforts to prevent the spread of the virus.

โ€œThereโ€™s been too much attention put on masks and not nearly enough on math, a focus on restrictions rather than reading and writing,โ€™โ€™ Ducey said. โ€œAnd itโ€™s students of color and those in poverty who have been most impacted by the COVID-era posturing and politics of some school bureaucrats.โ€

Those battles continue, with many schools continuing or imposing mask mandates with the omicron variant โ€” and despite the governorโ€™s orders that they cease.

So Ducey is now focusing on whatโ€™s next: a โ€œsummer campโ€™โ€™ with emphasis on catching kids up in math, reading and American civics.

โ€œWe will lead the way to eliminate learning loss,โ€™โ€™ he said, committing $100 million in federal COVID-19 relief dollars. And Ducey, who just recently promised vouchers for private and parochial schools to parents whose schools close due to COVID-19, boasted Monday that โ€œArizona schools are open and they will remain open.โ€™โ€™

The governor also mentioned several favorite GOP talking points.

He vowed to sign any bill the Republican-controlled Legislature to expand โ€œschool choice,โ€™โ€™ giving parents new ways โ€” and funding โ€” to send their children to private or parochial schools, calling it an issue of civil rights.

โ€œFifty-plus years ago politicians stood in the schoolhouse door and wouldnโ€™t let minorities in,โ€™โ€™ he said.

โ€œToday, union-backed politicians stand in the schoolhouse door and wonโ€™t let minorities out,โ€™โ€™ the governor continued, saying poor children and those of color are trapped in failing schools. โ€œItโ€™s time to set these families free,โ€ he said.

As to what is taught, the governor said students should learn to think critically, โ€œnot taught critical race theory,โ€™โ€™ though no one from his staff could cite a single district where that is being taught.

And while Ducey previously criticized a plan by gubernatorial hopeful Kari Lake for cameras in the classroom, he said parents โ€œdeserve respect.โ€™โ€™

โ€œAnd the occasional parent-teacher conference isnโ€™t enough,โ€™โ€™ he said โ€œLetโ€™s require all that a child is taught, all curriculum and academic materials, be put online and available to search and review by every parent, grandparent and interested citizen.โ€

But Ducey did not address a potentially more immediate problem: The possibility that Arizona schools will need to cut a collective $2.1 billion in spending โ€” and do so before June 30.

Arizona Republican Gov. Doug Ducey gives his State of the State address at the Arizona Capitol in Phoenix.ย 

A 1980 voter-approved ballot measure caps aggregate education expenses, with annual adjustments for inflation and student growth.

When voters two decades later approved a 0.6-cent sales tax to fund education, they exempted the additional dollars from the limit. But an extension approved in 2018 failed to include that language.

That, plus a drop in enrollment during COVID-19 last school year, translates to that $2.1 billion cut โ€” one that has to be taken before the end of the school year.

It would take a two-thirds vote to grant an exemption. But Daniel Ruiz, the governorโ€™s chief of staff, refused to say if Ducey would support it.

What Ducey does want is $1 billion for water.

The governor said Arizona has taken some steps to address the fact that hotter and dryer conditions have cut the stateโ€™s allocation of water from the Colorado River. That includes the 2019 Drought Contingency Plan and another $200 million last year to โ€œinvest in the water technology of the future.โ€™โ€™

But more is needed.

Think water from the Sea of Cortez.

โ€œThe need is clear,โ€™โ€™ Ducey said. More to the point, he said, there is an opportunity now, what with strong state revenues and a strong relationship with Mexico.

โ€œWhat better place to invest more?โ€™โ€™ he said. โ€œInstead of just talking about desalination, the technology that made Israel the worldโ€™s superpower, how about we pave the way to make it actually happen?โ€™โ€™

That, he said, will secure Arizonaโ€™s water supply for the next 100 years.

The governor put expansion of I-10 into the same category of investing in the future.

โ€œMore people means more infrastructure needs,โ€™โ€™ he said.

Going to three lanes in each direction already is in the plans by the Arizona Department of Transportation.

โ€œBut that project is still scheduled several years from now,โ€™โ€™ Ducey said. He promised an allocation in his proposed budget, set to be released Friday, โ€œto get the I-10 completion leap-frogged to the front of the priority list, ahead of schedule, connecting our entire state, north to south.โ€

The governor also said that lawmakers made bipartisan efforts in prior years to clear the backlog of untested rape kits, working to ensure that victimsโ€™ needs were prioritized.

โ€œBut as weโ€™ve learned, government bureaucrats often find a way around the law,โ€™โ€™ he said.

โ€œIn this case, some counties are charging these women โ€” these victims โ€” up to $800 in processing charges, and sending the bill to collections,โ€™โ€™ Ducey told lawmakers, though he did not say which ones. โ€œItโ€™s shameful, so we will be cracking down on this government abuse and, with your help, tightening the law.โ€™โ€™

On the issue of border security, the governor promised โ€œsignificant new investmentsโ€™โ€™ to strengthen the border strike force, provide new equipment to aid in pursing criminals, โ€œand deploy the latest drone technology to bolster surveillance and stop the cartels in their tracks.โ€™โ€™

But Ducey acknowledged that the issue really needs to be addressed on the federal level.

So he said he is crafting comprehensive federal legislation, including everything from a wall and virtual surveillance to increased resources to local communities โ€œthat have been devastated by these dangerous open border policies.โ€™โ€™

Only thing is, the House, Senate and the White House are in Democratic control. So the Republican governor is calling on the stateโ€™s two senators to use their influence to force action by their colleagues by virtue of the fact that a single senator can bring the chamber to a halt.

โ€œNo member of the Arizona congressional delegation that actually cares about the safety of our communities should vote โ€˜yesโ€™ on any legislation until the president agrees,โ€™โ€™ Ducey said.

โ€œSenator Kelly, Senator Sinema, check my website,โ€™โ€™ he said. โ€œWeโ€™ve even drafted the language for you.โ€


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