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Brewer out of town for special session

Gov. Jan Brewer is on the road, just as lawmakers are convening for their fourth special session.
Brewer left town this morning (Nov. 18) for a scheduled trip to Austin, Texas, where she will attend the 2009 conference of the Republican Governors Association. Spokeswoman Kim Sabow said the governor plans to attend both days of the conference, but will return to Arizona on Nov. 19.
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Senate Appropriations panel approves bills

The budget fix to eliminate a portion of the state’s $2 billion deficit is moving through Senate committees while the House is on hold until Nov. 19.
The Senate Appropriations Committee approved four bills after a relatively short deliberation on Nov. 18. Some of the bills received bipartisan support.
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Municipalities file special action for access to SRP watershed records

Two municipalities are challenging the authority of one of the state’s largest utilities and are now asking a Maricopa County court to order Salt River Project (SRP) to turn over records under the state’s public records law.
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Senate Dems want tribal school districts to tap impact aid

Senate Democrats are pushing to give schools on American Indian reservations the ability to access federal impact aid money to make up for state budget cuts to schools.
A handful of Senate Democrats want the schools to have permission to use the federal money in fiscal 2010 to essentially maintain the funding levels that were in [...] -
Special session kicks off, but most work slated for Thursday


Lawmakers officially kicked off the fourth special session of the year - the second devoted to the fiscal 2010 budget - with an uneventful gathering at the state Capitol on Nov. 17.
The work on taking a small bite out of the state’s $2 billion budget deficit will take place on Nov. 19, when House and Senate budget committees are expected to meet.
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Gay rights group files lawsuit against Brewer

Ten state employees have filed a federal lawsuit against Gov. Jan Brewer in an effort to reverse a state policy that bans state benefits to the domestic partners of state employees.
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Schapira to run for Senate; Arredondo to run for House


A longtime Tempe city councilor is switching parties to run for the state House as a Democrat after a veteran legislator announces her retirement. Ben Arredondo, who has served on the Tempe City Council since 1994, will announce his candidacy for the District 17 House seat. The move was prompted by Sen. Meg Burton-Cahill’s retirement announcement, which came at a Capitol press conference on Nov. 17.
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First Senate bill targets officials’ use of public money for ads

The first bill filed in the Legislature for next year’s regular session seeks to curb statewide politicians’ use of public money for self-promotion.
The idea is not new. Similar legislation was filed in the past with no success.
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Special session to begin today, Brewer drops by GOP caucus

Legislative leaders have said a special legislative session to address part of the state’s $2 billion deficit will begin today (Nov. 17), but Senate Republicans might have to rely on a vote or two from Democrats to pass all of the legislation on tap.
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Brewer travel plans may be bad sign for special session

A special session to deal with agency funding and other loose ends from the budget may still happen this week, but according to Gov. Jan Brewer’s travel itinerary, she’s planning for the likelihood that it won’t.







