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Senate OKs ballot measure to double lawmaker salaries

Key Points: 
  • Majority of Arizona state senators want to double their pay
  • Senators claim higher pay will attract more diverse candidates
  • Proposed pay hike would be tied to the consumer price index annually

A majority of state senators want to ask voters to double their pay.

And the claim is that Arizonans may get a better — or at least broader — choice of people to represent them.

The 20-9 vote March 11 to send the issue to the November ballot came on a proposal by Senate Majority Leader John Kavanagh who has argued that voters can be convinced it’s time to revisit the current $24,000 salary, first enacted in 1998. 

Under the Arizona Constitution, legislative pay can be altered only if there is a recommendation from the Commission on Salaries for Elective State Officers – and then, only if voters ratify that proposal. But every effort since 1998 to hike salaries has been rejected at the ballot box.

So the Fountain Hills Republican is trying something different.

He wants voters to scrap the constitutional provisions about commission recommendations and voter approval. In its place would be an amendment saying that salaries would be adjusted every year based on changes in the cost of living as measured by the consumer price index.

More to the point, if the proposal is approved, first by the House and then by voters, that would put future increases on legislative pay on automatic and make it the last time that lawmakers would need to go to voters for authorization.

But what is not obvious is that Kavanagh worded his SCR 1020 so that the indexing would begin based not on the current salary – assuming the measure is approved – but would instead be computed from that 1998 increase. And that translates into an immediate pay boost of more than $48,000, according to an inflation calculator from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Sen. Mitzi Epstein told colleagues that a pay hike is justified. She said while Arizona is supposed to have a part-time Legislature, the reality is that it can take 60 hours a week.

And it’s been years since lawmakers have adjourned in April as the rules suggest.

“The compensation needs to be there so that we can recruit people to do the job who are not already able to pay their way,” said the Tempe Democrat. Epstein, who is not seeking re-election, said she wants to be part of that recruitment process.

Closely linked to that, she said, is having a Legislature that is more reflective of the population.

“We cannot reach that representation goal unless we are providing a salary that you can live on,” Epstein said. “And $24,000 a year is not livable unless, in my case, you are already living on retirement savings.”

Sen. Mark Finchem agreed that a higher salary would lead to a more diverse Legislature.

“That means Joe Average can leave a job, or take a sabbatical for a couple of years, run for office, serve, and then go back to his job, without sacrificing that median home income for his family,” said the Prescott Republican. Finchem, who is seeking re-election, previously served in the state House for eight years, left to run unsuccessfully for secretary of state, and then moved to Prescott, where he won a successful bid to represent the area in the Senate.

Sen. Lauren Kuby, in her first term in the Legislature, echoed the sentiment.

“We certainly want people of all incomes to have the opportunity to run for office,” the Tempe Democrat told Capitol Media Services afterwards.

But she should not bring herself to support the measure.

“Why is this a priority when Arizona’s working families are struggling for fair wages?” asked Kuby.

She also noted it is now nine weeks into the 2026 legislative session.

“And we haven’t centered our attention on real struggles and issues affecting our communities,” Kuby said. “If there were a performance evaluation from our constituents, not sure how well we would score.”

Also voting against the measure was Sen. Jake Hoffman, who had his own set of reasons. The Queen Creek Republican told Capitol Media Services he isn’t buying the argument that higher salaries will result in a larger pool of qualified contenders.

Consider, he said, the congressional salary of $174,000 a year.

“Yet Congress limps along with approval ratings barely above 20%,” he said. And Hoffman, first elected in 2022 and seeking another term in November, said that California and New York legislatures, with salaries of $132,000 and $142,000 respectively, “have become poster children for overreach, bureaucracy, and policies many view as outright fascist and authoritarian.”

“Raising pay … simply entrenches career politicians, rewards incumbency, and further disconnects them from the people they claim to serve,” he said. “Proposals to increase pay for politicians only produce higher pay for politicians, nothing more and nothing less. Period.”

Sen. J.D. Mesnard said he’s not against the concept.

“It’s not a terrible idea,” said the Chandler Republican who was first elected to the Legislature in 2010. He also is not seeking re-election and would not be affected by what voters decide.

But he, too, voted against the measure, questioning whether it makes sense to set up a system that gives lawmakers an automatic cost-of-living increase every year.

“That’s a little bit more generous than most employers provide,” Mesnard said.

He also has a practical concern: Would voters, learning that approval of the measure would immediately double legislative salaries, be willing to go along?

Kavanagh, for his part, said he’s not worried about that. He said it’s just a matter of explaining to voters that this really shouldn’t be seen as doubling legislative pay.

The way Kavanagh sees it, when voters approved the last pay hike in 1998 – an increase from $15,000 that had been in effect since 1980 – they thought that $24,000 was an appropriate wage for that time. All his measure does, he said, is ask voters to adjust the current wages to match that level.

Kavanagh, first elected in 2006 and hoping for yet another two-year term, also said the proposal is fair: It is structured so that if there is deflation and the consumer price index drops, legislators’ salaries would drop the following year.

The measure now goes to the House.

History of legislative pay:

– Original 1912 Arizona Constitution: $7 per day

– 1932 initiative – $8 per day.

– 1958 referendum – $3,600 per year

– 1968 referendum – $6,000 per year

– 1980 salary commission recommendation approved by voters – $15,000

– 1998 salary commission recommendation approved by voters – $24,000

Lawmaker proposes renaming Corporation Commission for better awareness

Lawmakers, activists and members of the Arizona Corporation Commission have lamented that voters do not understand the significance of the utility regulation body, but one senator is hoping to correct that by changing the agency’s name. 

Sen. Lauren Kuby, D-Tempe, who ran for the Corporation Commission in 2022, said she often had to explain to voters what the commission was and what it does. Those conversations inspired her to introduce a concurrent resolution that would allow voters to change the body’s name to “Public Utility and Corporation Commission.”

Lauren Kuby

“I ran for Corporation Commission in 2022 and when I would talk about my race, I would say, ‘This is the most important office that no one has ever heard of,’” Kuby said. “It really is the fourth branch of government, and the title of it does not really describe what it does.”

The Corporation Commission oversees public utility companies in the state, including electric, water and gas. The commission also registers businesses and regulates securities, railroads and pipelines. It consists of five members who are elected statewide to four-year terms. 

The commission is probably best known for its role in determining what Arizonans will pay in utility rates and is charged with holding companies like Arizona Public Service, Tucson Electric Power and Southwest Gas accountable. Kuby says adding the phrase “public utility” to the name of the commission will better reflect the work done by commissioners.

“I think perhaps if there was a more accurate title that voters would be more aware of its significance to their daily lives,” Kuby said.

She said the proposed name was inspired by utility regulation bodies in other states that include the phrase “public utility” in their titles. According to a list compiled by the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, nearly every state’s utility regulation commission uses “public utility” or “public service” in their titles. Only three other states — Virginia, Kansas and Oklahoma — also use the title Corporation Commission.

Arizona’s Corporation Commission got its name when it was created by the state’s Constitution in 1912. In order to change the name, voters would have to amend the Constitution, which is why Kuby introduced the name change as a legislative referral to the ballot. 

Kuby’s referral will likely face an uphill battle in the Legislature, if it moves at all, since it was introduced by a Democrat. If it makes it out of the House and Senate, the referral would be sent to voters in 2026 for the final say. 

Sandy Bahr, executive director of the Sierra Club’s Grand Canyon chapter, said she thinks the name of the commission matters and has an impact on whether Arizonans pay attention to it.

“I think adding public utility to the name would benefit the public, because it would be more transparent,” Bahr said. “The name of the Corporation Commission goes way back and we’re in a different era now. A lot of what they do is regulate utilities, and that’s how most people are affected [by it].”

Rep. Justin Olson, R-Mesa, served on the Corporation Commission from 2017 to 2023 and said he doesn’t think Kuby’s idea is a bad one, but he isn’t sure it is necessary. 

“I think that it sounds like a very long name,” Olson said. “… I think the current name of the Corporation Commission is fine, but I don’t see any harm in any education efforts to help voters understand what the Corporation Commission does.”

He agreed with Kuby on the lack of awareness of the commission, saying it is a “very powerful branch of government that folks don’t know very much about.”

Olson said he also thinks candidates for the commission and those who have served on the commission make voter education a priority and should continue to do so to help constituents understand its purpose. 

“I think it’s critical that anybody in any public office is actively getting out and talking to the voters, and that’s something that I focused on as a corporation commissioner, as did my colleagues and I presume those that are there now are doing as well,” Olson said. 

Bahr said she thinks there are other ways the commission could be more accessible and transparent for the public. The body functions like a court and uses a lot of jargon when discussing energy policy, so Bahr said she thinks the commission could release agendas in plain language and provide explanations of agenda items during hearings.

“I remember the first time I went to a Corporation Commission meeting, and I seriously thought they were speaking in some kind of code,” Bahr said.

She also said the commission could do more to increase public participation in its hearings, like allowing people to sign up to speak the day of a hearing or by holding public comment periods with commissioners in the evenings when most people are not at work. 

As far as the name change goes, it’s unclear whether current members of the Corporation Commission will be supportive. Republican Commissioner Lea Marquez Peterson has made transparency and awareness a priority during her tenure, but declined to comment and deferred to a statement from the commission’s spokesperson.

In the statement, commission spokesperson Nicole Garcia said the commission is neutral on Kuby’s proposal. 

“Changing the name of the Arizona Corporation Commission would not change the agency’s mission or purpose,” Garcia said. “If approved by the Legislature and Signed into Law by the Governor, we will process accordingly.”

New Faces: Lauren Kuby

Lauren Kuby

Former Tempe Councilwoman and Vice Mayor Lauren Kuby will represent Legislative District 8 as its state senator. The Democrat will serve on the Senate Appropriations, Judiciary and Elections committees. According to her campaign website, Kuby has a background in sustainability, serving as a senior global futures scientist at ASU and leading Tempe’s climate action planning when she served on the City Council. Her top priorities include clean energy, increasing mass transit options, expanding the Groundwater Management Act and allowing cities to maintain local control. She also wants to increase accountability and transparency, and highlighted her success leading a dark money ballot initiative that received support from Tempe voters in 2018. In addition, Kuby wants to focus on campaign finance reform and enhancing voter participation through measures like automatic voter registration, according to her website. Her other main issues include eliminating ESA vouchers, developing long-term sources for education funding, protecting abortion rights, increasing affordable housing and worker protections. Kuby did not respond to a request for an interview before deadline. 

Editor’s note: This story has been revised to correct Sen. Kuby’s committee assignments. 

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