Citizens Letters

 

This page will feature letters to the Gold Canyon Website from area citizens in an open forum basis, with answers (when available) from the requested respondent. Scroll down for a series of very interesting letters. The website policy is to NOT delete letters as they seem to provide historic value.
 The site is provided as a community service by
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Pinal County Property Taxes are PAINFUL. PEEL Away the PAIN
CLICK HERE

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Comments on the Stan Griffis (former Pinal County Manager) Guilty Plea.
CLICK HERE for stories, Press Releases and Plea Agreement

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Editorial from Bob Satanan of the EV Tribune on Sunday June 1, 2008- CLICK HERE

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EDITOR - June 20, 2008

In Lewis Carroll’s “The Adventures of Alice in Wonderland”, Alice comments in regard to something she has seen with the exclamation “curiouser and curiouser”.  She must have gotten a look inside the Pinal County Sheriff’s Department because within that organization things indeed are becoming “curiouser and curiouser”.  Not a month ago the Sheriff, Chris Vasquez, was  caught plagiarizing various writers and admitted as much without a hint of remorse.  Now one of his deputies, a detective no less, is caught with about seven hundred pieces of sexually objectionable material secreted on his county paid computer – against county policy.  When this offense was exposed by a local newspaper, the Sheriff immediately weighed in with the announcement that an investigation would ensue and that it would be intense and thorough.  Here comes more of the “curiouser and curiouser” aspect.  Less than twenty four hours after the exposure of the detective and the Sheriff’s announcement regarding an investigation, and before the investigation is complete, another bulletin is issued by the Sheriff in which he excuses the deputy’s actions and we are all assured that we can relax, and of course breathe a sigh of relief, because the offender was only saving “soft porn”.  What rubbish!  But now, if we see a sheriff’s patrol car with the inside wallpapered and festooned with Playboy calendars it is because it’s only the soft stuff so it’s okay.
Doesn’t this irrational thinking demonstrate for us that there is something terribly wrong with the administration of the PCSO?  Does it indicate that the Sheriff, who has had his own problems with sexual harassment, and is rumored to be an electronic voyeur himself, is softening his stance on county policy to cover his own tracks?
Pinal County voters have two opportunities to clean out this rabbit’s hole.  Once in September at the primary elections or again in November in the general election.  Bear in mind the oft quoted Joseph DeMaestre who said, “Every country (county) has the government it deserves.”

Henry Katz - Apache Junction

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Comments: (Received June 23, 2008) 

Dear Golden Springs Neighbor:

This note is going to everyone in the Golden Springs Neighborhood.  Please talk a walk in our neighborhood to determine if you think our neighborhood is going down the tubes. It is hot outdoors but early mornings are a fine time to take a walk.  I ask this because during a recent walk, it was hard for me to focus on the beauty of the desert because garbage was a distraction.  There were f weeds and ugly “stuff” stored in yards.  Those big garbage bins in the front of homes are not so pretty either. 

Keep America Beautiful believes litter is often a starting point for other community blight.

 Research and experience prove that litter — intentional or unintentional pollution resulting from consumer waste products being carelessly handled or improperly disposed — attracts more litter.
 A clean community discourages littering and raises local living standards and quality of life.
 Litter is the result of too little attention to how waste is handled — the careless and casual handling of waste creates litter.

 People tend to litter because they feel no sense of personal ownership.
 People often believe that someone else will take responsibility to pick up litter that has accumulated over time. Because any and all items used in human activity have a potential of being littered, the scale of this issue is significant. Everyone shares a personal responsibility to help prevent litter in their community.

And you might want know about the "broken window" theory, too.  In 1995, Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Henry G. Cisneros published in a series of essays titled "Defensible Space: Deterring Crime and Building Community."   Mr. James Q. Wilson and George Kelling developed the `broken windows' thesis that suggests that the following sequence of events can be expected in deteriorating neighborhoods: accumulated trash, broken windows, deteriorated building exteriors. People who live and work in the area feel more vulnerable and begin to withdraw. They become less willing to intervene to maintain public order or to address physical signs of deterioration.  

Sensing this, offenders become bolder and intensify their harassment and vandalism. Residents become fearful and withdraw further from community involvement and upkeep. This atmosphere attracts offenders from outside the area, who sense that it has become a vulnerable and less risky site for crime.

A couple I know has already moved elsewhere.  They lost money on their home rather than wait until conditions got any worse.  If you care about the quality of life in our neighborhood, think about:
 Quick replacement of broken windows and fixtures
 Prompt removal of abandoned vehicles
 Fast clean up of illegally dumped items, litter and spilled garbage
 Quick paint out of graffiti
 Fresh paint on buildings
 Clean sidewalks, driveways and streets
 Do a good job of bagging up your refuse before putting it in the trash container.
 Weed your yard.  If you need help because of a physical problem, ask for help from your family, church members, scouts, friends or even your neighbors.
 Participate in cleaning up vacant lots and ally ways in the neighborhood.  Call 480-735-9200 if you are willing to help determine a date and organize the event or just willing to participate for an hour or two.

Sincerely,
Your neighbor down the street  - 480-735-9200

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EDITOR –   JUNE 3, 2008

Last week a prominent East Valley newspaper touched off a firestorm by exposing the Pinal County Sheriff, Chris Vasquez, as a plagiarizer.  He lifted other folk’s writings and incorporated them into his monthly columns and apparently has been doing so for a number of years.  A crowd of sympathizers and sycophants has surfaced with the excuse, the same as Vasquez’s, that if he did plagiarize, it was minor and for a good cause; and that he gained nothing from it. (Is this altruism run amuck?)  Even a small Casa Grande newspaper got all bristly and came to his side with the same defense even accusing the East Valley paper of electioneering. We need to thank that Casa Grande newspaper for defending Chris Vasquez’s plagiarism on their pages because they have displayed for us a prime example of consequentialism, the thinking that “the end justifies the means”.  Their defense of his acts elicits thoughts of the end justifying the means mantra used by the Stalinists of Russia when they were instituting their pogroms against their population . Even today, attacks by Muslim extremists against those who do not accept their religion are approved by many as justifiable, because of the perceived end result.

Vasquez indeed gained from his monthly homilies - and yes he did opine on subjects of morality - because he is an elected official and elected officials are always running for office, hence the benefit of having his name in the public eye.

No apologist for Vasquez, that I have read so far, specifically denies his plagiarism but instead states that “if he did plagiarize it was for a good cause”; therefore an exercise in consequentialism – the end justifying the means.  In our society breaking the laws and rules does not justify the outcome.  Liberals and socialists will tell you this is so, but they are wrong.  We cannot rob banks then turn the money over to the poor without being imprisoned - and rightfully so.  Neither can we steal the intellectual property of others without paying a penalty.
This affair is reminiscent of the plagiarism committed by Delaware Senator Joseph Biden many years ago when, in a speech, he lifted the words of British Labor Leader Neil Kinnock whole cloth. He was severely chastised by his fellow senators and forced out of the 1988 campaign  for president.
There must be consequences for the commission of illegal or immoral acts.  There is no better way for society to show it’s youth the difference between right and wrong.  The sheriff needs to do more than offer a limp and self-aggrandizing apology and the citizens of Pinal County must hold him accountable.


Henry Katz - Apache Junction

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(Received and Posted May 24, 2008) Dear Editor, 

Come on Chris, do you really expect us to believe that you plagiarized articles and speeches without expectation of personal gain?  What about the congratulations and accolades for the content of your monthly propoganda mission? What about the perception of a well-rounded Sheriff deserving of re-election? What about the constant and continuous marketing of the name Chris Vasquez that all the Pinal County media afforded you through your monthly articles for the last two years as you prepared for this years elections? 

And now you expect the voting public to provide you forgiveness because you've entered a mea culpa and said you're sorry, that you'll start giving credit where credit's due when you post your next article for publication? Do you hope that we've forgotten that when a respondent to one of your monthly diatribes suggested that Mike Minter was your ghost writer, you responded in the press that the messages you posted were of your own making and that credit for the content belonged to you and you alone?  

Weren't you one of the poster boys for a campaign by Central Arizona College touting the success of CAC graduates a couple years ago? I know that the professors and instructors at CAC go to great lengths to instruct their students on how to properly cite references and credit sources in papers that their students prepare. Are you suggesting that you weren't taught that while you were in school there, or later at Arizona State University? Are you suggesting that you didn't realize that your failure to disclose the words and thoughts of others was considered a sin in the education and media worlds? Are you saying that you weren't aware that many high ranking and highly paid executives of academia, government and private enterprise have lost their jobs for falsifying credentials and stealing the intellectual property of others? Are you suggesting that you should be granted amnesty by the voting public from a similar fate? Because why? Come on Chris, you knew exactly what you were doing. 

These new revelations only add fire to what was already a compelling case building against your re-election. Your role as Sandie Smith's hired gun in the harassment of Dale Bell and the dancers at San Tan Flats was ruled illegal by your own Superior Court. Your interference in the recent Arizona City elections for incorporation was highly publicized as being self-serving, biased and borderline illegal. Your preferential treatment of the good ole boys in your executive offices and your discriminatory practices in the hiring and promotion of your Deputies have been challenged in the Courts and the plaintiffs have been winning the lawsuits. Your roughshod treatment and periodic firings of volunteer Posse members who have dared to support your political opponents has been unconscionable. I've said it before and I say it again. Posse men and women volunteer to serve the public and to serve the office, not the Sheriff personally. They should be able to express their political opinions without fear of recrimination from you. 

Promoting your Public Information Officer to the equivalent of a full time re-election campaign manager at the taxpayers expense this last year has added further evidence that the system of cronyism, nepotism, and good ole boy protectionism pervading the County halls in Florence has created a climate of apparently permissive corruption which is way too commonplace these days.  

After the Stan Griffis criminal indictments and the declarations by the special investigator that our Board of Supervisors were either blind and ignorant or hopelessly spellbound by the aura and iron-willed domination of Dr. Stan Griffis, I guess mere plagiarism looks tame. Thankfully though, when you combine the transparent rigged elections and appointments, the outrageous taxation, and the exponential budget growth which has substantially outpaced the rate of population growth with the now multi-billion dollar boondoggle committed by the Board of Supervisors that has turned our neighborhoods into economic shambles and turned our roadways into congested parking lots, the life expectancy of all the contested elected and appointed high ranking officials in Pinal County is now counting down to less than six months. The system of County government that has led to consistent and persistent derelictions of behavior by the entire mob in Florence must come to an end. 

Lord Acton coined a phrase in describing the feudalistic system of government in 19th century England, "Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely". The evidence of the truthfulness of this phrase has never been more clear than right here in "Merry old Pinal County". 

To coin another phrase- " There's a new Sheriff coming to Pinal County- and a new Board of Supervisors, and a new Judge, and a new Recorder, and a new Assessor, and a new Treasurer, and a new School Superintendent, and a new State Senator, and two new State House members" 

Bill Bridwell - Casa Grande
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EDITOR –  MAY 17, 2008


“I apprehend no danger to our country from a foreign foe . . . . . Our destruction will be from . . . . . the inattention of the people to the concerns of their government.”
                                                                                       Daniel Webster (paraphrased)

I have just finished reading a newspaper story about the Pinal County Sheriff’s Department and their treatment of diners at San Tan Flats restaurant in the Queen Creek Area.  I will quote a little from the article, “…….  uniformed officers from the Pinal County Sheriff’s Office showed up and moved through the crowd, shining flashlights and asking restaurant patrons for identification.  They were out in force, it was not one or two like you would see anywhere else.  I felt like it was to show the public or intimidate the public ----to show them what they can do.”
These are the actions, against civilians, of an occupying force reminiscent of the Nazis during the Second World War.
What is amazing is that like sheep, the patrons of the restaurant are so intimidated, they meekly submit to this harassment, while they are dining on an expensive steak, instead of refusing the deputies’ requests for identification and ordering the deputies to stop interfering with their dinner party.
This all comes about at the bidding of the generals of the occupying force, Sandie Smith and the other members of the Pinal County Board of Supervisors; so the sheriff is not totally to blame.  The sheriff indeed can be blamed for not pointing out this is no way to treat law-abiding citizens and refusing to take part in it.  He’s just not that smart.
The people of Pinal County have a chance to correct these government failures by voting Sheriff Vasquez and the rest of the rascals out of office in November 2008.  Failure to do so will prove once again the validity of the statement by French philosopher Joseph de Maistre who said, “Every country (county) has the government it deserves.”

Henry Katz - Apache Junction

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EDITOR –  April 7, 2008
 
Nepotism, cronyism, good ol’ boy, favoritism, special favors are all words which accurately describe the staffing , management and operating policies of Pinal County, Arizona government at all levels and in all departments.  Mostly, the average citizen is not aware of the existence of these governmental peculiarities; only those who have frequent dealings with county employees become aware, and they soon learn that taking care of a special employee makes their dealings far easier than normal.  But if the average citizens were to pay attention they would note certain signs of cronyism right out in the open.  For example:
1- A high ranking sheriff’s official was caught in a love tryst with a female underling and the sheriff said he was “unable to investigate” the accusations and instead farmed out the case to the Chandler Police Department.
2- The county manager was implicated in the theft of weapons from the sheriff’s volunteer posse and the investigation was turned over to an outside agency because the sheriff was “unable to investigate”.  The manager was tried in another jurisdiction because it could not be assured the local superior court could render an unbiased trial.
3- Currently, the manager of the county fair and two other employees are suspected of mishandling money and the sheriff, again, is “unable to investigate” and the case is assigned to the state Department of Public Safety.
4- Even though Pinal has a fully staffed county attorney’s office, the prosecution of a San Tan restaurant for violation of an aged “blue” law is sub-contracted to private attorneys at a cost to taxpayers of nearly $300,000, and it is not over yet.
5- A command officer in the sheriff’s department sued the Pinal County Sheriff for racial discrimination and the net result was an out-of court settlement in which the command officer is assigned to his home on a daily basis at full pay, doing nothing, until he reaches retirement age.

All of the above are  direct and unnecessary costs to Pinal County taxpayers.  So why the reluctance to investigate and prosecute?  Because the nepotism and cronyism are so incestuous in the county that the Sheriff, the County Attorney and the Board of Supervisors are loath to investigate their friends and family members for fear of reprisal that will in turn net them their own investigation.  While reading this, did the word corruption come to mind?

Henry Katz - Apache Junction

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Homeowners Angry about Tax Bills

.pdf of Article published in Independent

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(Received and Posted March 26, 2008)
Comments: 

I was greatly disturbed to see an Apache Junction Welcome banner at the Safeway LPGA parking lot this morning on my way to work.  Since when is
a Gold Canyon event welcomed by an Apache Junction banner?  Is this  a sign of things to come?
Sharon Rogers

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(Editors Note - The E-Mail below was received from a Pinal County Resident who received Mr. Katz letter. This is his response and the letter is printed below)

Subject: Re: letter to editor

Ah yes, Mr. Katz. No pussyfooting here.  Prowlin' and a growlin' when there's corruption in the air. He can spot a phony before they get a start;
that's why they call him Katz, he's got everybody's heart!

Subject: letter to editor

EDITOR                         March 3, 2008

It’s an election year!  Can’t tell?  Just listen to all the politicians telling you anything and everything you want to hear, and more.  Turn on the radio or TV and there they are.  Read a newspaper or magazine and there they are promising you the moon and the stars.  All you have to do is vote for them.  They’re also real busy polishing their image the best they can despite the fact they are politicians. And that brings us right home to good old Pinal County where the gang that runs it is so worried about the after effects of the Stanley Griffis affair (it was, after all, their responsibility), the political detritus from it and the possibility of their own exposure that they have issued the “integrity, ethics and accountability” document.

Included in this manifesto is the establishment of a third party “whistle blower” hotline designed to allow employees to fink on their boss without being fired.  Do the county managers really think the folks will take advantage of this knowing that everybody today has “caller ID”?  Are they really expecting phone calls from the employees who voted for their bosses all these years, just so they could keep their jobs? As a tag line on the “whistle blower” service, the county has formed a Public Integrity Committee responsible for follow up on issues reported to the hotline.  Try guessing whether or not the committee will be comprised of Board of Supervisor sycophants.

Okay, lets give it a try.  Here are three issues that would be good for an anonymous call, which I wager would never be answered:
1- Recently the Public Works Department advertised a small construction job.  The lowest bid came in at approximately $800,000 but the job went to a company that bid over $3,000,000.
2- The sheriff has ten sergeants assigned to the field with no squads to supervise.
3- The deputy who normally functions as the sheriff’s public information officer has been re-assigned to run the sheriff’s campaign for re-election, on duty, which has resulted in  the hiring of a second highly paid PIO.

 The next part of the document establishes an Internal Audit Office and an auditor, who will report directly to the Board of Supervisors in order to “remain unbiased, objective and independent in all respects.”  This might work if the supervisors of Pinal County were themselves unbiased, objective and independent; and also clean and pure as the fresh driven snow.  But many of us who have lived in Pinal County over the years are aware the opposite is true and many of Pinal County’s current problems originate with the Board of Supervisors.

This entire document is nothing more than an attempt to make the voters feel warm and fuzzy about their county management, to forget about Stanley Griffis and his thievery and put miles and miles between them and the sordid truth.  An internal auditor at this point is the same as a farmer, who after finding a snake has been stealing his chicken eggs, hires another snake to watch his henhouse.
What Pinal County needs right now is a forensic audit performed by an outside agency.  A forensic audit would clean up county government and remove the stench generated by 135 years of unchecked ineptitude and criminality and start to restore the faith of the county’s citizens.  Need money for this?  You have read for years about the BOS spending millions of dollars for outside studies and advice; there is money.  A forensic audit would be a worthwhile expenditure.

Henry Katz - Apache Junction

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(Received and posted January 29, 2008)
Here is a series of emails which demonstrate the stonewalling and obfuscation which exists in Pinal County government.
CLICK HERE .pdf file

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EDITOR –                                      January 23, 2008


For the past week the East Valley newspapers have been reporting that Pinal County has a budget shortfall of $10,000,000 and doesn’t know where to make up the money. 
The county manager, Terry Doolittle, wrings his hands in frustration and postulates saving money by, among other things, freezing new hires for open county positions.
It might work and again it might not.  But the Sheriff, Chris Vasquez, has obviously not been listening and for a reason which is highly suspect.  
Has anyone noticed that the Sheriff’s Department now has two public information officers?  We have the good ole standby Mike Minter but Vanessa White has recently
been added to the staff.  Why?  Vanessa will handle plain old every day sheriff’s bulletins but Mike has been moved up.  Is it possible that, just like the last time Vasquez ran for office,
Minter will be in charge of the election campaign through November 2008 and be paid his regular county salary?  
If we think about it, we should see that the salaries for two public information offices don’t reduce the shortfall, but add to it; especially when one of those salaries should be paid
from the sheriff’s pocket, not the county treasury.

Kenny Baker - Apache Junction

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January 13, 2008 - Editor

So, Russell Sgro is still whining about the loss of the over ride election in the Apache Junction School District during November’s election in 2007. The local voters have told him and the AJ School District, “You have enough money, spend it more wisely.” Now he is pointing his “they’re starving our poor children to death” vitriol at Russell Pierce and others on the state level. In the interest of clarity and open government it must be noted that there may be more of a problem for Mr. Sgro than children’s welfare.  How many know that he is one of those “highly paid” Apache Junction school administrators and that his wife is a “highly paid” administrator for a school district in Queen Creek and that the two of them live in a fine home on an exclusive Gold Canyon golf course.  With this information in mind it is not difficult to wonder if Mr. Sgro’s concern is for his salary more so than children’s welfare. We would love to see a headline some day that reads, “ SGRO STOPS WHINING – PLEDGES TO SAVE TAXPAYERS MILLIONS”

Henry Katz
Apache Junction

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EDITOR                              December 22, 2007


Let's see if I have this straight. George Johnson, while attempting to create La Osa development commits numerous crimes severe enough to cause the State to fine him $7,000,000.00 and to cause his helpers to be fined $5,500,000.00. Then George isn't required to pay the fine himself, it will be paid by his insurance company.
If this is really the case, even though it surely sounds like an Alice in Wonderland affair, I would be happy to apply it to my own life. As an example, let's say I am caught by the powers that be with a whole back yard full of marijuana that I have been growing for the retail trade, I am arrested and tried and found guilty of growing pot for the purpose of sale. Using the George Johnson precedent, does that mean, now, my home owner's insurance will pay my fines and keep me out of prison?
I think not! But if it works for George, why not me?
On a serious note: Why does the State receive all these fine monies rather than Pinal County where the crimes actually were committed?

Kenny Baker - Apache Junction

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Additional Letters and articles about the San Tan Flats fiasco and how the Pinal County Board of Supervisors and Supervisor Sandie Smith are preparing to potentially waste hundreds of thousands of taxpayer money CLICK HERE - For an Open Letter to Sandie Smith CLICK HERE - Letters regarding the AJUSD Over-Ride Election - CLICK HERE - Letters regarding NO $$$ for Freeways - CLICK HERE.

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November 15, 2007

EDITOR – I have done my very best to abstain from writing this letter but despite  super human efforts I find I cannot control myself any longer.  So here goes:  
To Russell A. Sgro of Apache Junction,  “Welcome to Kenny’s world!”

Kenny Baker - Apache Junction

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NOVEMBER 8, 2007

EDITOR - The voters/taxpayers of Apache Junction have just gone to the polls and told the Apache Junction Unified School District that the district does not have permission to exceed its budget by 10% for the next seven years.  The request was handily defeated with a 14 point margin.  Curiously, at this writing, these facts have not become official (reported by the Pinal County Elections Division) and it has been 40 hours since the polls closed. Despite the fact only 2500 people voted, and despite the fact Pinal County is using the very latest in electronic voting machinery, the vote count has not been reported in a timely manner.  One has to wonder what causes such a long delay.  Two reasons come to mind:
1 – The elections people are altering the vote count or,
2 – The elections chief, Gilbert Hoyos, is in way over his head when it               
 comes to counting ballots other than by hand.

Henry Katz - Apache Junction

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Subject: AJUSD BUDGET OVERRIDE - October 19, 2007 - Editor: 

The Apache Junction Unified School District is once again robbing from Peter to pay Paul by initiating, for the second time in approximately a year, a $250,000 SPECIAL ELECTION for a frivolous budget override.  This fleecing of property tax payers is unconscionable. We have "visions of Sugar Plums dancing through our heads" as we ponder what we could bo with the half million dollars the AJUSD just tossed down a rat hole.

 We could pay for our healthcare premiums and prescription drugs, which amount to $1000 a month.  We could pay for our Arizona Property Taxes which are $5,258.70 this year and rapidly climbing.  We could afford car gas once again and not be fraught with fear whenever we have to make a trip the grocery store to buy our more costly food.  We could pay for our increasing utilities and stay warm in the winter and cool in the summer, and flush our toilets and take an occasional bath.  Perhaps we could even buy a piece of clothing when we need it.

 We have tried diligently to remedy our situation by selling our charming, country-cottage style home on five acres at the base of the Superstition Mountain but after a year of several price reductions it has not sold and this will be the last year we have any savings left to pay for our medical expenses and property taxes.

 So while we are already paying the AJUSD this year $1,955.32, and the Pinal County Junior College system $620.82 through our property taxes and they claim they need still more of our money, our finger nails are white and shredded from hanging on to the edge of the cliff before we commence to fall into a deep crevice.

 If you know of anyone that has the money and the guts to buy our home and acreage it is all for sale.  We can no longer AFFORD to live our retirement dream and partake of the magnificent views of the Superstitions since those in Pinal County Government, the Apache Junction Fire District, the Apache Junction Unified School District and the Pinal County Junior College system have decided to join the ROBBER BARONS of the world and steal what little we have left through property taxation.  These silly fools are killing our economy and ruining our lives and are too stupid and greedy to care.

 Craig and Carol Fornelius - Apache Junction, AZ 85219 (SEE Related Article - CLICK HERE)

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(Received and Posted October 4, 2007) ALERT!! The Pinal County Skulkers are at it again!

Dear Editor: 

It's not just an assault on our Western Heritage, it flies in the face of every Pinal County Comprehensive Plan meeting where the citizens have said that preservation of our rural lifestyle is their number one priority. 

I am speaking about the changes hidden deep in the bowels of our Counties new 304 page draft Zoning Ordinance revision that will limit horse ownership in the most rural parts of our county to just two per acre.

Once again our elected officials are secretly changing our lives by changing our laws. Their goals are an urbanized City of Pinal with an over-riding County authority that was so graphically detailed in their "Morrison Institute - Pinal Plan for the Future." 

The Morrison document was a big-government directed narrative that is being followed up with a big government directed Pinal County Comprehensive Plan series of workshops. The end result of that process has already been determined. 

This new 304 page zoning revision draft talks about conformity to the Pinal County Comprehensive Plan throughout the document. The zoning plan is scheduled to be adopted into law months before the conclusions of The Pinal County Comprehensive Plan process are supposed to be completed. Amazing sleight of hand, isn't it? 

The most troublesome part is that our elected officials consistently impose increases in our taxes, abridgements to our liberties, and changes in the laws we are required to abide by in an underhanded, skulking fashion. They always do this to us in the dead of night and behind closed doors.  

The creation and extension of separate taxing entities like the new Health District and the extended transportation tax assessment are designed to free them from any obligation of their general fund monies. This process allows them to continue to grow our government and fund their pet projects unencumbered. Our already outrageous property taxes are going up at least another 20%  next year after already going up every year for the last 6 years. 

Their excesses and failure to implement infrastructure has left us snarled in traffic jams and created a reduction in the value of our homes by over 40% while the rest of the State has only suffered 0-12% reductions during the current housing recession. 

They perpetuate their system of government through nepotism, cronyism, and good ole' boy protectionism. Calculated departures combined with rigged appointments are the hallmark of their masquerade on an unsuspecting public.

Their principle architect, Stan Griffis, is locked away from society, but the instruction manual he left behind is still in full play in Pinal County. 

The only scheduled public input opportunity for this 304 page zoning document is supposed to occur on Oct 19th and Oct. 25th in Florence at times in the day when we are all required to be working. There will be no further opportunity for public input until the final ordinance is prepared for approval by The Planning and Zoning commission and the Board of Supervisors.

Their typical game plan would be to place the approval in the consent agenda to slip it past the public unnoticed. Without the alert action of a handful of citizen watch-dogs we would never have known about the changes to the rights of our horse-loving neighbors until their orders for horse evictions were delivered. 

Who knows what other evils lurk in the text of 304 pages of revised zoning ordinances. We all should click on the Pinal County website and read it.

Then we should all show up on October 19th to express our objections to all of the changes in the plan that take away more of our freedoms. 

If we re-elect a single Pinal County incumbent for any position in 2008 then we deserve this unending barrage on our lives. Don't let these actions keep happening. Tell your friends and neighbors, read the 304 pages and storm the doors of the County on October 19th. Then vote them all out of office next November. 

Bill Bridwell - Casa Grande

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EDITOR –   August 29, 2007 (Editors Note: While Ms. Sheppard did respond in the ajnews she did not submit her letter to the G.C. website. It has been requested.)

What a thrill it is to have one’s letter published in the local paper and it is especially exciting to know the editor of said paper will transmit it to a third party for rebuttal even before the letter is published.  I refer of course, to the recent letter in which I/we, citizens and taxpayers in the Apache Junction School District, admonished other taxpayers to vote no on the upcoming tax override issue because the school district has problems spending money wisely.  Carol Shepherd, school district public information officer, issued a snappy but somewhat contradictory letter in reply.  I have no intention of challenging her position on the several points she makes because our differences are relatively minor.  Suffice it to say she really never denied any of the allegations.  One point remains outstanding and begs for an answer.  Ms. Shepherd tried to account for most of a $49,000,000 plus bond issue, which included a new Gold Canyon High School, which has not and may never be built, but she has not reported what happened to the $17,000,000 (a third of the bond total) that had been allotted for that project.  Was it spent on other projects without telling the taxpayers (a moral issue), is it sitting somewhere in a school district office as petty cash or has it somehow been returned to the taxpayers so they can delay getting their part time jobs to help the district continue its spendthrift ways?  Simply stated, where is it?

Kenny Baker - Apache Junction
 

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EDITOR – August 22, 2007

Just like the proverbial “foot in the door” magazine salesman, after you have told him “no I’m not interested”, the Apache Junction School District has returned with its bid for another go-around to get the voters to pass a budget override so they can continue to spend tax money needlessly and foolishly.  Several local pundits have opined that the school administration is untrustworthy because the district does not specify exactly how the money would be spent, besides the fact the money is not needed for important programs.  Lost in the dust of controversy are two facts never mentioned:  First, the cost to the taxpayers. Every time the district has their override placed on the ballot it costs several hundred thousand dollars.  Second, the district administrators have already proven they are un-trustworthy.  Does anyone remember a bond issue a couple of years ago that the district just “had to have” to build a new high school for Gold Canyon to the tune of about $50,000,000? After the bond was passed and we began paying for it Apache Junction School District decided a new high school in Gold Canyon was not what they wanted after all and they decided, without asking the taxpayers, to spend the money elsewhere. Does anyone know where it was spent?  Why wasn’t it returned to the taxpayers?
Here is an anecdotal account of an event that offers a clue to the thinking in the AJ School District.  Dr. Greg Wyman, district superintendent, was pitching his need for the override last spring to a political group in Apache Junction.  Responding to the question, “How do you expect taxpayers on fixed income to continue to pay these escalating costs?” Dr. Wyman said, “Get a part time job!”
We recommend a NO vote on this latest attempt for an override!

Kenny Baker - Carol Fornelius
Irene Baker - Craig Fornelius
Ron Reinagel - Todd House
M. Briggs - Tuni House

Apache Junction/Gold Canyon

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Dated:  August 13, 2007

--Original Message-- From: Robert/Pauly Skiba [mailto:rskiba@hotmail.com]

Subject: Pinal County Health District - DON’T BE FOOLED

In response to news releases by Pinal County regarding the passage of a new taxing district for the Public Health Department.  I offer the following in rebuttal: 

On July 11, 2007, the Pinal County Board of supervisors unanimously passed a motion to create a new taxing district in Pinal County.  The purpose of this new district is to create a new revenue stream (a sales tax) for the Public Health Department.  This new money will allow the Health Department to increase its hours of operation at the ten (10) county clinics, along with adding additional staff to those clinics.  In addition, the Health Department intends to purchase and operate five (5) new RV type vans  (at a cost of approximately $350,000 each or a total of $1,750,000) staffed with a nurse, a nutritionist, and a driver for each to tour areas of the County not covered by the present ten (10) clinics.  This is to be paid for by the taxpayers of Pinal County without a vote of the people. 

The county flooded the newspapers with an article covering the Board of Supervisors July 11th meeting stating that the unanimous decision by the Board to create a taxing district for the Public Health Department was met with a round of applause by those in attendance.  However, the county failed to mention that the July 11th meeting was loaded with employees of the county working in the Health Department.  Those county employees were encouraged to attend the meeting and were given time off from their jobs that day.  Who did their jobs for approximately two hours while they were in the Board of Supervisors hearing room?  I certainly didn’t hear the supervisors complain, but this is an example of how our county is being managed by the Board of Supervisors and the Health Department supervisors.

     This all sounds so good until you look behind the scenes to see what is actually happening at these clinics.  According to my study these clinics are little used by the pubic or stated differently they are under-utilized throughout the County, with present staff doing nothing more than sitting in the clinic waiting for patients. 

     Using daily patient figures furnished to me by the Health Department for year 2006, which figures do not agree exactly with my independent study, it is quite obvious that these clinics are under-utilized by the public even when you use Health Department numbers. 

     Presently it costs the Health Department (Budget 2006-2007) approximately $5.5 million to operate with the money coming from two sources:  the general fund and grants.  The creation of a new taxing district will increase the current budget expenditure from $5.5 million to approximately $9.7 million (estimated for 2008), a pretty heft increase for a government activity with very questionable operating needs. This new money would include general fund money, grants, and the new sales tax.  If this picture were to occur in private business the health department would be in immediate bankruptcy or it would be begging some charitable organization to fund the many inefficiencies currently in effect. 

Our county elects to mis-state the numbers on immunizations for young people (birth to 2 years) as one of the reasons for the new taxing district.  If we have a low number of immunizations in the county, which I seriously doubt, there are many variable factors potentially responsible, such as:  (1) parents are leery about the quality of the vaccines used as other illnesses may show up years later as a result of the vaccine (2) there may be religious reasons against vaccinating a child, or (3) there are many variable factors involved in the record keeping aspect of immunization for children as to skew the statistical data by the record keepers.

      Our county boasts of the fact that it has reduced the tax rate $0.45 in the last two years (2006= $0.16 and 2007 = $0.29).  What the county doesn’t mention: that it is forced by Proposition 101 passed by the voters recently (2% levy limit on spending for cities, counties and colleges) to reduce the tax rate.  Without Prop 101 who knows what the rate would be?  Certainly as the assessed valuation of the county continues to explode upward (2006 - $1.2 Billion), one might assume a substantial tax rate reduction, but that does not happen.  Instead our county government continues to find ways each year to spend all the new revenues in a very questionable manner.  With all this new money pouring into Florence we should be enjoying the best of highways and roads throughout the county, along with all the other infrastructure that our tax dollars should buy, such as, beautiful parks and recreation facilities, first rate libraries, etc. 

     This public health department tax district issue is just one of many ill- conceived programs by our elected government officials who take advantage of the fact that the general public is so complacent that it (the Board of Supervisors) can get away with developing and passing the tax district without a vote of the people, or without the general knowledge of the citizens of Pinal County as was done in this case. 

     Someone has said that the “price of freedom is eternal vigilance.”  A government that is not responsive to needs and wishes of all its people will eventually lead us down the path of self-destruction as a democracy.  We all need to carefully monitor the happenings in Florence.  Remember this is still a government by and for the people.

 Robert Skiba - Box 1057 - Oracle, AZ 85623 - 1-520-896-9343 - rskiba@hotmail.com 

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July 25, 2007 - EDITOR
 

Senator Thayer Verschoor, in an opinion column July 25th makes an impassioned, if not reasoned, boast that the recent 48th Arizona State Legislature, led by him and all the other Republicans has done a more than “yeomanesque” job of cutting taxes.  He admits up front that Arizona is known nationally for its complicated and inequitable property tax system.  He laments the extraordinarily high property tax burden on Arizona businesses.  He praises members of the legislature for making miniscule alterations to business tax levies but when all is said and done the “inequitable” system remains solidly in place.

Additionally he talks about the “truth in taxation” calculation, limits on schools’ ability to increase taxes, limits on primary tax rates and cuts in income tax rates; all of these calculated to endear legislators to the hearts of property tax payers while, at the same time, reducing taxes.  He goes on to say that “our legislative system relies on voters evaluating whether their elected representatives are successful . . . . .in solving the state’s problems,” and that “taxpayers are often wisely skeptical about claimed accomplishments politicians make . . . .”

So, using the skepticism granted to me by Senator Verschoor, I have to ask, “If what he reports is true, why do all my taxes and especially my property taxes keep going up?  Why does the property tax system remain as convoluted as ever? Where is the legislative mandate to the state’s county supervisor boards ordering they lower their property tax rates commensurate with the obscene increase in valuations, which they themselves (legislature) commanded? Are he and the other members of the legislature ever going to do something to the system that is more than cosmetic, such as implementing a consumption tax to replace the property tax, a change he espoused at least five years ago? Or, should I just learn how to cheat on my taxes?” 

Kenny Baker - Apache Junction

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Comments: (Received and Posted August 8, 2007) - The writer has requested anonymity. It is on file with the GCWS. 

How could Sandi Smith & the Pinal County Planning & Zoning approve a storage facility to be approved on Rt 60 near the fire station. Didn't they learn anything with the protest on the fire station? A storage facility is not what the residents of Gold Canyon want people to see when they drive through our beautiful area. The storage facility was protested when they wanted to put it near Basha's and now they snuck it next to the fire station. I believe the residents should have been better informed by Planning & Zoning regarding what was to go in front of peoples homes.

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Email:     sandys@spcdock.com - Comments: (Received and Posted July 14, 2007) 

Now that the sewer co has received their increase, everyone on the Corporation Committee should be voted out of office. It seems no consideration
was given to the people it services, just the company and its share holders

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PINAL COUNTY - Can’t forget the traffic mess

Editorial from THOM SCHUETT 07/14/2007


   
Sunday’s opinion piece lamenting the changes in Pinal County reminded me of the silliness of “The Future of Pinal” report. Before Pinal takes another step into the future, it needs to deal with its past. The Board of Supervisors would like everyone in the vicinity to forget about the past and focus on the future. While that sounds nice, let’s make sure that we place accountability for the traffic mess that resulted from unfettered growth without infrastructure brought on the area by Johnson Ranch.
   What were the supervisors thinking when they abdicated their obligation for responsible growth? What good is “The Future of Pinal” unless we understand how the traffic mess occurred? Who is to blame for the lack of planning and forethought? Who is to blame for the cavalier attitude taken towards the residents of that area of Pinal County and surrounding communities? When are the responsible parties going to confess and take their lumps?
   The newspapers are full of rhetoric about Pinal’s future and frankly, I am tired of it. It is primarily the residents of neighboring Maricopa County and Queen Creek who will end up paying for the incompetence of Pinal government. The Pinal County supervisors dropped the ball and there is no reason to believe they can handle the reins of responsible growth, no matter who gets paid to produce a report on the future of the county.

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Dear Friends and Neighbors, 

Yes, the Ghost of Tax Initiatives Past is alive and well.  It seems another initiative to limit Property Taxes will be on the ballot, thanks to Marc Goldstone of the group Arizona Tax Revolt. 

The Prop 13-like initiative was reported on the front page of the Arizona Republic on July 11 by reporter Mary Jo Pitzl who has been following this issue closely.  You may read the article and judge for yourself whether this is something you'd be interested in passing, then please, if you don't mind, pass this along to others who may also be interested.  Go to: 

http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/news/articles/0711proptax0711.html 

 My personal take on the article is that it is slanted against the initiative.  Once again we have government agencies and pro government orgs decrying the loss of income (why don't they complain, I wonder, about the increased costs to Arizona's property owners?) Once again there is the comment that if your valuation increases by 40% it doesn't mean that your taxes will increase correspondingly.  Now isn't that just about the most disingenuous piece of misinformation you have ever read?  No, perhaps my tax bill won't increase by 40%, but it's gonna be a whole lot higher than it is now. 

Then, we have our elected officials who, bless their hearts, always seem to find the glass half full and note, in quotations all over the news media, that the tax "rate" is either going unchanged or is down by a small percentage.  I am fortunate indeed to be represented by such folks, who have the opinion that we're all simpletons incapable of doing what amounts to 8th grade math.  To determine your increase in taxes, don't look at the assessed value.  Simply determine what you paid year after and calculate the percentage increase year to year.  Then compare that to your assessed value.   These elected "leaders" are lucky!  They have the Tax Assessor to lean on to do their dirty work.  (OK, so that is an elected position too) All they need do is watch home prices soar and they can kick back, feet up on the desk, light the big fat cigars and wait for the annual valuations to be posted so they can vote for their new and increased spending initiatives.  I HAVE YET TO HEAR OR READ ABOUT AN ELECTED OFFICIAL WHO ACKNOWLEDGES THAT  INCREASED VALUATIONS RESULT IN HIGHER PROPERTY TAXES AND ARE HURTING PROPERTY OWNERS!!! 

So, please read the article... pass it along to your friends, and hopefully we'll have the opportunity to put some controls on what now amounts to an OUT OF CONTROL system of taxation. 

Regards to all, - Tony D'Alessio

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WHAT PINAL COUNTY REALLY NEEDS!

(Received July 10 and Posted July 11, 2007) Dear Editor: 

The $272,000 Pinal Plan for the Future was a huge disappointment and one more colossal waste of hard-earned taxpayer money. Its only value was in the encapsulation of the failure of County leadership over the last decade. 

It may take a generation or longer to correct the challenges we face today and any pursuit of the directions suggested in The Morrison Institute’s proposals will only delay progress. 

As the public gathers for the forums planned by the County over the next 10 days I hope they are not hoodwinked into thinking any of the 17 cool tools are even remotely viable or should be given any further consideration. In my opinion they are a recipe for continued disaster, bigger government, and higher taxes. 

Here’s a list of 21 initiatives that can immediately help set our County on a path towards recovery from the debacles of a collapsed housing market, failed infrastructure planning, misdirected government growth and exorbitant taxation. 

 1).       The County leaders should admit that they’ve been in over their heads for the last decade and go get some real help. The County manager’s job should be advertised for a nationwide search. Doolittle’s selection was done in a fashion counter to the taxpayer’s best interests. He should compete for the job against the best in the nation and in front of a panel of solid citizens that fairly represent the County. (Ed Note: According to the Pinal County Website the county manager's salary is over $150,000 per year + benefits. There was absolutely NO talent search conducted when Stan Griffi's retired with a lot of county money. The spouse of the County Manager is also the County treasurer (she was originally appointed). Our County Supervisors choose NOT to answer the question of why all of the appointments) 

 2).       There’s a difference between City government functions and County government functions. The County made a mistake when it got into City business, we need to reverse this process. 

 3).       Place a moratorium on all new major zone changes and planned area developments in the County for the next 12 months. Revise development criteria then let private enterprise meet the new criteria. There’s a 20-year supply of already approved lots on the books. We don’t need to add more approvals until we’ve changed criteria for future development. 

 4).       Encourage and incentivise all existing urban developments in rural settings to incorporate or seek annexation over the next thirty-six months. Gold Canyon, Arizona City, and  Santan/Johnson Ranch should seriously be considering annexation or incorporation. Future developments should be encouraged to take place in existing municipalities.  

 5).       Reverse the impact fee waiver entitlements and place a 5-year cap on the exemptions. Any new residential lot built after five years should pay impact fees at the current rates. There should be no more free rides. New growth must pay its own way. (Ed Note: County Leadership has indicated thgis cannot be done, however they have NEVER shown any proof of the inability to utilize a reversionary clause) 

 6).       Dedicate 10% of the property taxes collected annually to augment the impact fees for roadway infrastructure for the next 10 years. The County gave away a half billion dollars in unassessed impact fees that would have paid for roads. Unfortunately we still have to build the roads. 

 7).       Leverage the impact fee revenues and property tax dedications to build roads today through a bond issue. The current road deficit can be financed and built now and paid for with dedicated revenue streams over the next 20 years. 

 8).       Leave the North/South Freeway expansion and Williams Gateway Freeway to ADOT, the Feds, and private enterprise. Those projects will move forward without County money.  

 9).       Partner with ADOT and The Gila River Indian Community for development of industrial/technology oriented employment centers adjacent to I-10 to provide closer employment for commuter residents. The GRIC has the capacity to induce business growth and relocation that will benefit Pinal County. 

10).      Work with CAC and the State Legislature to expand Central Arizona College to a State College facility offering expansive 4-year degrees as well as work-force training and education. Better education opportunities will help bring additional commerce and industry to Pinal County. 

11).      Initiate State Trust land reforms that provide 10% of the Trust lands for use by municipalities and Counties as dedicated open space and public facilities. There is adequate State Trust lands to allow every County and City to set aside large tracts for future enjoyment by their citizens and to expand regional parks, sports, recreation and entertainment options. 

12).      Stop using the ½ cent transportation fund to arbitrarily enrich the property values of a select few at the expense of all. Leverage the funds for engineering and soft costs to fund road improvement districts to be repaid by adjacent land owners. If citizens want their roads paved to enhance their values, they should be able to do so – financed by the County and repaid over time. 

13).      Convert the County Fairgrounds property to more beneficial use. Relocate the fairgrounds operations adjacent to I-10 or U.S. 60 with population centers that will provide substantial profits to the public venues. We can only break-even at best for years to come at its current location. 

14).      Develop a regional sanitary sewer and treatment system to be operated by municipalities and/or the County. Stop enriching private enterprise at public expense. Reclaimed water is important to our future and it belongs to the public not private entities.  

15).      Develop incentives for existing private utilities to convert or revert to public entities to protect our future from profiteering at public expense. For a developer to front load utilities to build sub-divisions for their profit is ok, but the utilities should revert to the public at some future time. (Ed Note: Residents of Gold Canyon see a 70+% sewer bill increase in July 2007 due to poor planning on the part of our district supervisor)

16).      Re-enter the landfill business. Phase out private landfill ownership in favor of affordable public facilities. Incentivise use of landfills, increase punitive desert dumping measures. Today’s technology make landfills a great opportunity and a major public benefit. 

17).      Fund expansion of regional Industrial Development Authorities, regional Economic Development Foundations and regional Tourism Authorities. These entities are better suited for pursuing future growth and economic opportunities. 

18).      Impose a cap on property tax value increases and let economic expansion grow the budget. No citizen has received any additional services in exchange for the recent increases in their tax bills.  

19).      Commit to a 10% per year reduction in our property tax rate for the next four years. Live within those means. The County will continue to grow and expand on a per capita basis. There is no need for additional taxes generated by current rates imposed on rising values. 

20).      Place a moratorium on expansion of the Florence County Complex for at least four years. We have enough issues to deal with. Building more buildings doesn’t provide better government. 

21).      Stop manipulating the County leadership through the anointment and appointment hierarchy. Provide interim management to run departments until the next elections when officials leave early. Stop masquerading hand-picked replacements to run as incumbents. The current method of promoting through nepotism, cronyism and blatant political partisanship must stop.  

The future of our County requires tough choices today that will reverse our current direction and place us on a path to more responsive, fiscally constrained government that reports to the people. 

Don’t let the discussions at the forums lead us down some primrose path to some fairyland future that can never come to pass. Let’s get down to business that makes a difference today. 

Bill Bridwell - Casa Grande 

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Robert Skiba - PO Box 1057 - Oracle, AZ 85623 - July 12, 2007 

Dear Editor 

In my opinion, Pinal County government (read Board of Supervisors) has just moved one step closer to full blown socialistic health care.  On July 11, 2007, our illustrious board unanimously voted to form a new taxing district as a means of providing additional revenue to our currently under-utilized county health department.  Most people in the county were unaware that this was even being considered.  There was only one public input meeting on this subject and that was held in Florence on June 28th at 7:00 p.m.  Only a handful of people attended as the meeting was not advertised throughout the county.  There was strong opposition to the formation of the taxing district by several citizens at the June 28th and July 11th board meeting.  However, it was obvious that, regardless of the opposition comment, the board was going to approve this new wrinkle for the good citizens of Pinal County whether they like it or not.

          So sit back and watch our county bureaucracy provide health care coverage of sorts to all those who do not have coverage under a medical plan, while you good citizens fork over a high monthly premium to provide coverage for you and your family.  We have at the present time more government programs in the field of health care than you can imagine starting with Medicare, Medicaid, Access, etc.  The State Health Dept has over 84 individual programs, while Pinal County has in excess of 56 individual programs.  Where and when will this stop?  Only when the hard working, tax paying citizens of our great country say we have had enough!  Let us take back our government by being more informed and involved in the affairs of government.  Use the Internet to keep up with the happenings of government.  We can make a difference if we want to do the work necessary to maintain efficiency and responsibility in our government.  Never forget what Stan Griffis, former County Manager, did for six years (2000-2005) when no one was watching the cash register.  What say you fellow taxpayers?  Robert Skiba rskiba@hotmail.com 

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A study entitled "The Future at Pinal: Making Choices, Making Places" has been done by the Morrison Institute for Public Policy at Arizona State University. While much has been said about the county's rapid change from rural area to urban, the study includes some sobering statistics:

-- The population rose by nearly 67 percent in six years to 300,000 by last year. Actually, Pinal passed the 100,000 mark not all that long ago.

-- Pinal is the sixth fastest-growing county in the nation.

-- It is expected to have 1 million residents by 2037.

-- About 23,500 people move to the county each year, or about one family per hour.

-- A fourth of Pinal's residents moved in 2005.

-- The number of jobs per 1,000 residents in Pinal in 2004 was 261, while it was 585 in Maricopa County.

-- The average commuting time for Pinal workers in 2005 was 27.9 minutes, compared to 24.8 for the state.

The county and its cities obviously have a big challenge to meet in dealing with rapid growth, the transportation problems it is causing and the need for jobs closer to home. The county government only recently implemented impact fees on new homes to help pay for the costs associated with growth.

The six "placemaking" goals focused on in the study are:

-- distinguish Pinal from Maricopa and Pima counties.

-- protect miles of desert and open land.

-- provide choices for transportation and mobility.

-- create and attract "career pay - career path" jobs.

-- support unique, "fair share" communities.

-- develop Pinal's talent pool.

Such studies usually are difficult to implement. This one, however, has much to look at. The county certainly has much potential and huge challenges. The Morrison study should help in facing up to both. Public input is being sought for the creation of a new comprehensive plan. The study is available at www.morrisoninstitute.org.

kenny baker

Jul, 12 2007

Regarding your editorial about the Morrison institute study on Pinal county: 1) it is not the responsibility of county, or any government, to create jobs. if that were the case the county has been hugely successful as the county itself is the largest single employer around. 2) pinal county may have begun assessing impact fees on new homes recently, but no one ever discusses the fact that up to 500,000 yet to be built homes are on the books with fees never having been paid and therefore are exempt from paying them. 3) pinal is already distinguished from Maricopa and pima counties with the highest tax rate in the state and is scheduled to increase taxes again and again to pay for the flagrant mistakes made by our very own board of supervisors. no company with an eye toward profits will locate in Pinal because of the high property taxes, therefore no jobs and no careers. a case in point: several new hospitals are under construction just west of the Pinal line in Maricopa even though apache junction and northern Pinal have no hospitals.

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Comments: (Received June 30, 2007)
Instead of a bypass around Gold Canyon a frontage road on both sides of RT60 in Gold Canyon so residents can access the business along that section of RT 60.  This should be less expensive and keep the shoppers from being in the main traffic on RT60 - Please do not publish my name

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     EDITOR-        JULY 1, 2007
A  front-page article in a major East Valley newspaper on Sunday (CLICK HERE FOR ARTICLE)
(EV Tribune July 1, 2007) exposes the dunderheaded and immoral administration of Pinal County.  It is a real comforting feeling to know that someone else is now aware of the morass that exists here besides those of us who find ourselves prisoners of an economic system that is ruled by uneducated, selfish cretins whose only concern is “what’s in it for me?”
These are the folks who, in order to promulgate their agenda, will lie to the taxpayers and in efforts to protect those lies, will lie again.  Supervisor Sandie Smith is quoted as stating, “I wasn’t copied on that letter.” in reference to a written extortion letter sent out by Stan Griffis on Board of Supervisor’s letter-head stationary, including her name, demanding $2520.00 or the loss of previously approved zoning.  In a jail house interview Griffis admitted the legal basis was shaky, but said they needed the money.  Where is the morality here?  Isn’t it the same as saying they knew bank robbery is illegal, but they needed the money and that’s why they robbed a bank?  Either Mrs. Smith is being disingenuous when she denies knowledge of this incident or she is so inept that she needs to resign immediately.
George Johnson offered the BOS a deal: waive all fees related to development --------- and he would provide all roads, utilities etc.  (We know today he used second and third rate materials which have not lasted nor worn well and got involved in the theft of a private party’s water company resulting in the county defending themselves in a law suit because they were complicit in the theft.) The BOS happily agreed because the developer was taking all the risk that could, in their minds, pay off for the county as a whole.  Here again, where’s the morality?  The BOS was not elected to gamble with taxpayer money.  The odds are probably better at an Indian casino but we would not condone casino gambling with tax money.
Sandie Smith did not push for impact fee collection, she said, because Supervisor Jimmie Kerr was against it.  Was that a convenient cover?  One that would allow her to continue to receive large campaign contributions from developers?  Or maybe, as you may remember, years ago comedian Flip Wilson used to blame his faults on someone else by claiming, “The devil made me do it!”  Perhaps Sandie is simply claiming “Jimmie made me do it!”  But where’s the morality in that?  Betcha Jimmie doesn’t like it a bit having his name dragged into this mess because it might get him a pass to be Stanley’s roommate.
Current and former Pinal County officials say they could not have anticipated the “explosion in demand” for housing that occurred.  Yet, they had the limited vision to set up the Superstition Valley Transportation Fund.  Was that a serendipitous mistake or do they lie when they claim they couldn’t forecast demand?
In December 2004 Sandie Smith was quoted in newspapers as saying the widening of Ironwood Drive would begin in early 2005 and be completed in early 2006.  She also stated that the project was to cost $30,000,000 and would be paid for by developer impact fees, “up-fronted”, and that it would not be at taxpayers’ expense. (The project, which is nowhere near complete in July 2007 is coming in at closer to $100,000,000 with taxpayer bonds of $66,000,000 obtained by the BOS, without a vote by the people, and now presented as a major part of the 2007/2008 budget.)  Were Mrs. Smith’s statements about the Ironwood widening lies?
This ham handed administration of the taxpayers’ needs continues unabated because the entire county structure needs to be rebuilt from the BOS down to the lowest level.  Rick Romley’s investigation of Stanley Griffis revealed only the tip of the corrupt iceberg in Pinal County.  The voters are going to have to see this soon and clean house or we will all be bankrupt thanks to the Pinal County Board of Supervisors.

Kenny Baker - Apache Junction, Az.  85220

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 -----Original Message-----From: casaderoca@aol.com - To: forum@evtrib.com
Subject: rule changes in pinal county - EDITOR – June 17,  2007
            
A letter was published Sunday in the East Valley Tribune from John Fillmore of Apache Junction (Mr. Fillmore's letter appears immediately below), in which he decries the current political state of Pinal County describing it as 1956 Georgia-style politics and further stating he is waiting in anticipation to see what else develops in the so-called continuing investigation and aftermath of the Stanley Griffis swindle. While I agree with most of what Fillmore  says, he hangs his truth-seeking hat on Sheriff Chris Vasquez for supposedly breaking the Griffis debauch in the first place.  Wrong!  The true whistle blower was a lowly sheriff’s reserve officer who wanted to know why the bank account, consisting of donated monies used for the reserves’ replacement uniforms and equipment, was missing $21,000.  When he started making noises about missing funds, the sheriff and the county attorney, Carter Olsen, now a Pinal County Superior Court judge, took off for the tall timber saying they couldn’t handle the investigation.  The issue was kissed off to the Board of Supervisors who in turn kicked it over to former Maricopa County Attorney Rick Romley for investigation.  (This does sound like 1956 Georgia-style politics, doesn’t it?)  Nevertheless, we are all familiar with the outcome of Romley’s less than adequate “look see” and report.
As part of his report Romley recommended twenty-two policy changes for Pinal County, which would supposedly prevent future thievery.
Now the kicker, and this is a quote from a column written by the Trib’s Craig Anderson and published early in the week of June 4th.  “Smith (BOS chairman Sandi Smith)) said the board did not even wait for those recommendations to implement changes to prevent another incident, (this is the best part) more evidence that it (the BOS) was not party to Griffis’ crimes.” Who is she trying to kid?  That’s evidence?
But wait it gets even better!  The Pinal County Board of Supervisors, in a unanimous decision, instructed the new Pinal County Manager, Terry Doolittle (Stanley Griffis’ former right hand man and assistant county manager) to oversee the implementation of the new rules.  Isn’t this the same as delegating a coyote to watch your chicken house?  Without a huge voter upheaval or some real criminal investigation and prison time the Terry Doolittle “oversight” of administrative changes is all we will see; and we won’t get to see much of that.
Kenny Baker
2501 W. McDowell Bvd., Apache Junction , Az

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Letter to the editor: June 9 2007 - Griffis Theft 

In light of the recent Griffis theft, confession and sentencing last month I have wondered, what does it take to have the Pinal County People show revulsion?  The only bright light in the county government within the past few years seems to be the Pinal County Sheriff’s office under Chris Vasquez and his officers for getting the ball rolling on bringing this county tragedy into the open.   

As an outsider to government, I have seen only stonewalling, shell games, innuendo of innocence, and blatant half truths of “Okay we have fixed it”!  Does anybody in the county actually believe that Stan Griffis was able to steal $600,000 plus dollars, increase his salary, abuse his credit card, open bank accounts in the county name, draw county monies for his own use, purchase equipment, and mislead officials without the knowledge of others?  How many signers are required on county checks? Who overlooks the books?  Why do the road monies from these impact fees never seem to get to any legitimate budget or ledger?  Why had no-one missed them?  If this is possible, I could go to the local Wells Fargo bank tomorrow and open an account called “Impact Fees”.  I could then call every Developer in the county to send their money to me, as no one seems to have missed any of it in the past!  However, I may have to hire a group to help handle the bookwork, but I can take them to Hawaii on my credit card if they get overworked as was done with your tax dollars while nobody seemed to notice or complain! 

Look, I believe that the overwhelmingly vast majority of Pinal County workers are the best, hardest working, most honest, and friendliest people in the state, but I believe they have also had to operate in an atmosphere of cronyism, good ole boys and 1956 Georgia style politics.  I also believe this is not right! Why should our neighbors, brothers, sisters and friends have to work in such an environment that they can be intimidated, coerced, and bullied?  I have anxiously waited to see what develops on this policy clean-up, what outrage explodes, and what other items come to light in an investigation that is still supposedly ongoing. 

I am aghast that there have been only several letters from the general population and small glancing articles from the press.  We, in Pinal County, deserve better!  We need to clean house of the leadership that allowed this to happen and demand an OPEN FULL ACCOUNTING OF ALL DEVELOPER RELATIONSHIPS, IMPACT FEES, SWEETHEART DEALS, TRADE-OFFS and other under the table deals that may have been transpiring.  We need to see that there are now checks and balances, and an open door policy without retribution or worry.  We need programs that reward for shining the light and not hiding the darkness in government.  We should have an outside audit, (beyond the ongoing criminal investigation) by unelected, non-partisan citizens.  These would be Pinal County leaders untouched by this gross travesty who would underwrite, investigate, and allow a system that reflects change. Perhaps then we will all see the brightness that should be Pinal County’s future and not just a few lines of newsprint fed from those who have an air of complicity believing that they have solved the problem.

John M. Fillmore - Apache Junction Arizona 85219

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EDITOR                            June 10, 2007

Your main editorial in today’s paper, Sunday EV Tribune, has gotten my blood boiling because of your complete abandonment of Libertarian principles by supporting the ill conceived immigration bill, which has failed, so far, in the U.S. Senate.  You have publicly stated that this bill is better than nothing at all which, in my mind, is akin to “voting for the lesser of two evils”.  What is wrong with aiming for perfection?  I read your newspaper to reinforce my Libertarian beliefs, I recommend it to my non-Libertarian friends and hopefully I also gain knowledge for myself.  But your position today is intolerable and I can only hold to the belief this was an editorial mistake.  Indeed a not so close reading of said editorial reveals so many grammatical errors, misspellings, typos, missing words and poor punctuation that I can truly believe that this was written and submitted in the dark of night without the benefit of an editor’s pencil. Let us all hope that by Monday morning your staff will have sobered up and printed a retraction.

Della Marie O’Gato - Apache Junction

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EDITOR - JUNE 6, 2007 - COMPARING DEVELOPMENT FEES

On almost a daily basis, we newspaper readers are treated to a whine from the City of Queen Creek about how their town is congested with traffic, that they are basically unable to do much about it and if they knew what to do they don’t have the money they need to fix it.  We are now treated to the news that Senator Thayer Verschoor, Rep-Gilbert has wangled $10, 000, 000 from the state which will be earmarked to spend on traffic congestion in twelve cities statewide.  Ten million divided by twelve amounts to $833, 000 per city; enough for one intersection with traffic lights.  Oh, and by the way, the money is not a gift, but would be a loan.  Is he kidding?  Is this the best he can do?
The city fathers in Queen Creek are not doing justice by their constituents.  The real traffic problem comes from Pinal County where the Supervisors there allowed willy- nilly construction of thousands of development homes without providing the necessary infrastructure, namely roads.  They allowed thousands of people and cars into Pinal County, but were so inept with their management they did not look far enough ahead to provide highways to move these thousands of cars and people.
Queen Creek should sue Pinal County for this lack of forethought and for the dollars it will take to solve QC’s traffic problems.  Before you laugh, consider that if Pinal County had bladed earth in a manner that caused huge floods during a rainstorm, which, in turn, washed out the center of town, the fault would be obvious and Pinal County would be on the hook for restitution.  It is the same principle: Pinal County is derelict in their duties in the real as well as the hypothetical situation.
So, Queen Creek elders, hire a lawyer.  The answer to your traffic problem lies in the Pinal County budget, which by the way, has doubled in the last two years for no apparent reason.

Kenny Baker - Apache Junction, Az. 85220

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(Received and Posted March 23, 2006) - Dear Editor:

            The revelations keep on coming. Now it’s credit card abuse!

Are we really supposed to believe that there is no culpability on the part of our highest elected and appointed officials in Pinal County in regards to Stan Griffis’ criminal acts?

According to them they are shocked and dismayed. Their trust has been betrayed. They’ve issued reams of policy changes that are aimed at preventing this kind of felonious behavior from ever occurring again. Their spin machine is working overtime to distance themselves from Stan Griffis and to offer up sacrificial underlings to bear responsibility.

Where is their responsibility? Stan Griffis stole thousands of dollars every month for four years directly from accounts that the primary oversight responsibility rested directly on The Board of Supervisors, The County Treasurer, The County Manager and The County Attorney.

What happened to the arms-length distance between the elected offices that is supposed to protect the citizens?

What happened is a web of deceit and subterfuge that ties all of them together in a system rife with nepotism, cronyism, and good ole boy protectionism. At the heart of that web was Stan Griffis and all the top-level players in Florence are all gummed up and mired together in the web. There are no separation of powers left. They are all for one and one for all and move about like robots. Groupspeak, groupthink and groupact.

Stan Griffis falsified his paychecks in order to defraud the State Retirement system. Terry Doolittle prepared the payroll and became County Manager as Stan Griffis’ handpicked successor. He was dutifully appointed by The Board of Supervisors without challenge, behind closed doors and surreptitiously approved in the consent agenda. Dodie Doolittle, Terry’s wife, issued the payroll and signed the checks. She rose to power through the anointment, appointment process whereby Stan’s long list of pals and confidants relinquished their elected seat prematurely in order to permit hand-picked successors to run for office masquerading as incumbents. A process  used many times and has brought us Laura Dean-Lytle, Carter Olson, Dodie Doolittle and for all intents and purposes, David Snider. I hear more are on the way.

The warrants authorizing payroll were reviewed and approved by David Snider, Lionel Ruiz and Sandie Smith. Carter Olson reviewed the legality of all the board and county actions.

The transportation fund monies Stan stole came from the highly controversial voluntary road tax that Sandie Smith implemented in her district. The money was watched closely by all three supervisors for two years before it was implemented countywide. The money was at the heart of the Ironwood/Gantzel Road controversy.

Again, are we really supposed to believe that no one ever did any quick math and determined that the number of approved lots times the tax as compared to the fund balance was short by over a hundred thousand dollars every year for four years?

The final big question is about the arms length relationship that should exist between the county and developers. While developers were showering Stan Griffis and his family with gifts, they were simultaneously showering each of the Board of Supervisors with tens of thousands of dollars in developer-directed campaign contributions. I wonder why the implementation of legitimate citizen-demanded impact fees proceeded at a snails pace? I wonder why Pinal County has been described as a developers dream county?

 Pinal Partnership, the thinly-veiled lobbying arm for the developers in Pinal County, have hired Tom Smith, the husband of Supervisor Sandie Smith, to be their executive director. Were there no other qualified people in the state?  Now the County and Pinal Partnership have entered into a cozy collaboration to look at solving the gridlock we are all suffering with. I guess it’s appropriate that the group that created the problem should have to fix the problem, but like they say in the movies, follow the money. Something’s fixing to get fixed alright, but it’s not just roads.

Stan Griffis is going to prison for his crimes. There are a group of clerks and secretaries who will lose their jobs as sacrificial lambs. But, what about Sandie Smith, Lionel Ruiz, David Snider, Carter Olson, Dodie Doolittle, and Terry Doolittle? They say they didn’t collaborate and were not complicit. They say they are working to fix the problems, but to paraphrase Ronald Reagan, the existing county government can’t fix the problem because they are the problem.

            Nonfeasance is the failure of an elected official to protect the public from harm when they could have or should have done so. It is equally as indictable under the law as the criminal acts committed by Stan Griffis. Rick Romley has turned the balance of the case over to Carter Olson and Terry Goddard to pursue. As a result, the case is effectively closed because they’ve already shown their colors and loyalty by permitting our county to continue to operate with three supervisors in violation of the intent of the five-supervisor statutes.

They should all resign, but that likely isn’t going to happen. Fortunately though, the 2008 elections are just around the corner and all of the bad actors in this Greek tragedy that has enveloped Pinal County are up for election.

            There’s a saying in politics that the citizens deserve the government they get. It refers to voter complacency and voters failures to properly research the candidates and issues. Like all simple sayings, it is largely based on the truth. However, no one deserves the government we have all been forced to endure in Pinal County.

Not much research will be required on how to vote in these upcoming county elections.  If the candidates are listed as incumbents, throw the bums out!!

Bill Bridwell - Casa Grande

Comment from a reader - Makes good reading but creates nightmares since every word is the truth. Art

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Original Message - From: casaderoca@aol.com - To: canderson@aztrib.com
Sent: Thu, 22 Mar 2007 8:21 PM - Subject: today's article

(Editors Comment - Writer is sending a note to Craig Anderson of the EV Tribune and inclusing a letter that the writer wrote in June of 2005
 questioning the honesty of Pinal County Government)


Craig - i was interested in your analysis of stanley's crimes in the paper today. and the credit card fraud reminded me of a letter i wrote almost two years ago.  i have hi-lighted a couple of areas of interest, particularly the hawaii trip.  the federal contracts for the jail seem to have disappeared in smoke.  i still like my steak medium rare. - kenny baker


June 30, 2005 - EDITOR

A press release from Pinal County issued by Joe Pyritz on June 24, 2005, says that an additional $61 million has been set aside in the new budget to hire 16 new deputies for the sheriff's office.  If this is truly the case, that amounts to $3,812,500 per employee.  He also states that there will be 44 other new employees hired in the coming year.  Giving Pyritz the benefit of the doubt, that he can't use the English language properly to convey a message clearly, this would now seem to total 60 new employees.  These 60 total personnel come at a cost of $1,016,666.67 each.  Whether it is 16 or 60 positions they are trying to fill, the anticipated employees seem REALLY expensive.  Is part of this $61 million actually secretly slated to pay for the new jail instead of relying on federal contracts, as announced earlier, because the contracts just are not there?  Or is the county going to pay each of these new people salaries in the millions of dollars?
Also, in the press release, it was announced that the entire coming budget totals $359,012,470.  Nowhere, though, was it pointed out that the new budget is THIRTY PERCENT higher than last year.  OUCH!!!  Rear Admiral Smith, the Chairman of the Pinal County board of supervisors is pleased to announce that "This is a balanced budget", and in typical Pinal County fashion, fails to point out that what got her a balanced budget was the massive assessment increases by Assessor Paul Larkin.  Chairman Smith tells us that only nineteen percent of Pinal County revenues come from property taxes. We should ask her at this point, "Why, then, is Pinal County's portion of our tax bill THIRTY THREE PERCENT?"
Conspicuous by its absence, or perhaps well hidden, is a plan to pay for the upcoming "learning" conferences at exotic locations, such as Hawaii, for favored Pinal County personnel; or just maybe, if we're lucky, the admiralty plans to take all 200,000 county residents along on the next outing.  Wouldn't that be something? (Particularly since we have already paid for it over and over again).
Finally, in the last two sentences of this press release, Pyritz points out that Pinal County's tax rate remains at $4.4532 (the highest in the state) and the maximum could be $8.2429 (as though we poor overburdened taxpayers are getting a discount from the powers that be.)
When we look closely at all this information, it becomes obvious the Pinocchio people are still lying through their teeth.  Is it possible they actually, consciously, want their noses to grow longer?

Kenny Baker - Apache Junction

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Name:      On March 27 the GCWS received a request to remove the writers name.

Comments: - The driveway exit at the new Chase Bank at Superstition Mt is directly across from the Jack In The Box exit.  Both business exits are at the entrance/exit for the shopping center.  That is going to be an extremely busy little driveway and I bet a lot of accidents are going to happen.  Did the County give their OK?  Did Chase Bank have pull with the County to get this approved?  Was the DRO asked for their opinion?  Again, it appears the people of Gold Canyon are not being considered (just like the AJFD didn't care what Gold Canyon thought about the new fire station) when a new business wants to open in Gold Canyon

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Hi Folks. 

Yes, I'm still kicking, and after I got my 2008 Residential Notice Of Value a couple of weeks ago, my kick just got amplified... Seems the increase over the 2007 Full Cash Value (FCV) is 42.4%!!!  That's right, 42.4 %, and that in a period when the real estate market is in a downward trend. 

I don't know what factors motivate our Pinal County Assessor to authorize such outrageous increases, but mine is now going to be pretty darned high.  I surmise that if there is no significant increase or, heaven forbid, decrease in the tax rate, my property taxes will increase by a similar percentage. 

Just for the record, taxes have been rising dramatically since we built our home in 1999, and our FCV has gone up accordingly.   By the way you can check on anyone's assessment information at the Pinal County Website... all you need is their home address. 

I then noted that in order to file a protest, one needs to call the County Assessor's Office to request an appeal form.  Is this BS or what?  Why can't they simply post the appeal forms on the web site so one can download them, print them out, and then fill them in accordingly?  Are they just trying to impede the appeals process and make it more difficult to submit a protest?  Duh! Probably.  And I'm not surprised.... 

Now I recall that we all went through the 5 phases of tax grief last year, or was it the year before. (Denial. Anger. Bargaining. Depression. Acceptance.) but I believe the corpse has been resurrected and is about to start thrashing about once more, and FYI, here's what I have done:  First, I did a MLS search for all homes in area code 85219, using my square footage, number of bedrooms and baths, and I came up with 17 homes on the market, ranging from $215,000 to $1,000,000.  The average of these listings is about $460k, and if I toss out the highest and lowest the average is about $420k FCV.  That's about half of the value shown in the Notice they sent me.  So, if I need to "prove" the value of my home using real estate listings, that would be the case, and that is my approach. 

I'm telling all of you know this because I still firmly believe that the County is sticking it to us here in the Superstition Foothills and using us as their CASH COW.  And for what we pay, we get little or no services. 

Hey, I'm tired of being milked. 

(Any discussion/ideas are welcome... and we still haven't heard about another exit out of this community besides Nodak Rd and Route 88... Oh, and pass this along to anyone in the community you think might be interested in taking on the Tax Man.)

Tony D'Alessio

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(Received and Posted March 20, 2007)

Catagory:  Comments - Name: Taxpayer - Address: Pinal County - Telephone: 000-000-0000 - Email: taxpayer666

Comments: - The people of Pinal County deserve just what they get. Rick Romley gave them an out, just blame Stan Griffis’ for all of the problems in Pinal County. Now Stan is the bad guy and the BOS are the victims? Come on people let's get out the tar and feathers and show the BOS that we’re not going to accept their incompetence anymore. The BOS has pulled the wool over your eyes if you think they are not part of this boondoggle. At the very least they were asleep at the wheel while Griffis’ did as he pleased with the County’s money. Let’s place the responsibility where it belongs. We elected them and we can unelect them. Don’t wait for the next election. Those who have the most at stake (That would be the Republicans) should start a re-call election. Let’s get the incompetents out of office before they give away, waist or loose all of the county’s money.

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(Received and Posted March 8, 2007)
 

March 6, 2007 - Editor - Pinal County Malfeasance

I find it pathetic that during the investigation of Stanley Griffis by Rick Romley there was no finding of wrong doing by the Pinal County Board of Supervisors. 

It has been common knowledge among a number of the citizens of Pinal County, that Mr. Griffis was a scoundrel and committing wrong doing.  How could it be the citizens knew of his dishonorable and fraudulent tactics and ethics, yet the Board of Supervisors knew nothing? 

Let's look at some items of interest within Pinal County's corrupt walls of government. 

1.    It is a known fact that there are gross discrepancies and irregularities in the assessment of properties in Pinal County.  In some situations over assessments are levied on property owners who expose County wrong doing, while under assessments occur for those shielding and supporting County government.  The County Assessor's Office needs to be thoroughly investigated. 

2.    Mr. Griffis not only used County monies and County employees to build his two major room additions to his house (which appear on the County Assessor's "Parcel Detail" as Residential Yard Improvements, he also built the additions on road easements.  How is it he was allowed a building permit by the Planning and Development Department?  The Planning and Development Department needs to be thoroughly investigated. 

3.    After Mr. Griffis retired and a known investigation was taking place, two roads that are adjacent to his property were miraculously paved.  But if Mr. Griffis stole the money from the fund for road improvements, how did the Public Works Department have the funds to pave those two roa