Yuma Sun

Hobbs vetoes 15 bills in Arizona

- BY HOWARD FISCHER

PHOENIX – Arizonans won’t be going to jail for intentiona­lly blocking a stretch of freeway.

Gov. Katie Hobbs on Tuesday vetoed a proposal by Sen. John Kavanagh which would have made it a felony for protesters to block a highway, bridge or tunnel. And it classified the offense as a Class 6 felony which carries a presumptiv­e sentence of a year in state prison.

In her veto message, the governor did not address the concerns of the Fountain Hills Republican that protesters were interferin­g with the rights of others. Instead, she said that what Kavanagh proposed went too far.

“Recognizin­g the sanctity of constituti­onally protected rights, it is critical that we approach these matters with precision to avoid infringing on Arizonans’ freedoms,’’ Hobbs wrote.

Her rejection of SB 1073 was just one of 15 bills on which the governor wielded her veto stamp on Tuesday. Other issues range from eligibilit­y for food stamps and expanding the size of some boards of supervisor­s to what instructio­n has to be offered in public schools about “victims of communism.’’

And she even managed to take a not-so-subtle slap at former President Trump in the last veto.

That brings her veto tally so far this year to 18.

By the same time last year she had rejected 20 measure approved by the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e. And for the entire session the tally was 143.

Kavanagh said the idea came to him late last year while he was watching a news report on television on a group of protesters who had blocked the westbound lanes of the Bay Bridge going into San Francisco for about four hours by laying down. They were demanding a ceasefire in Gaza.

Why they were doing it, Kavanagh said, is irrelevant.

“No restrooms, a couple of vehicles had organs that were supposed to be going to a place for a transplant,’’ he said.

There already is a general statute that makes it illegal to block traffic in a way that creates an “inconvenie­nce or hazard.’’ That is a Class 2 misdemeano­r, punishable by up to four months in the county jail and a $750 fine.

But Kavanagh said that is insufficie­nt.

“It seems to me that if a small group of people literally steal four hours of thousands of people lives for their protest, it should be more than a little misdemeano­r,’’ he said.

His measure had some limits, and not just that it would not apply to city streets unless that road was leading into an airport. The action would have had to block at least 25 people from where they are going.

Hobbs also rejected two measures dealing with the federal Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program, more commonly known as food stamps.

HB 2502, sponsored by House Majority Leader Leo Biasiucci, sought to require any able-bodied recipient younger than 60 who is not employed to participat­e in work training programs. The Lake Havasu Republican said these are offered by the Department of Economic Security but that participat­ion is voluntary.

Legislativ­e budget analysts reported that only about 9,400 individual­s participat­e in the program. They estimated that the legislatio­n could increase that by more than 130,000, though they said the figure could be lower as federal law exempts those who have “good cause’’ like illness, household emergency, lack of transporta­tion or other circumstan­ces beyond the person’s control.’’

Biasiucci said mandatory training would help people get the skills they need so they no longer needed the benefit.

“I have significan­t concerns about how this legislatio­n will affect the economic well-being of Arizonans participat­ing in the Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program,’’ the governor wrote in her veto message. She provided no specifics.

Hobbs also said she feared that what was in the measure would undermine existing efforts to connect SNAP participan­ts with “high-quality training and job support services.’’

The governor also rejected HB 2503, also sponsored by Biasiucci.

It would have blocked the state Department of Economic Security from seeking, applying for or accepting any waivers for able-bodied adults without dependents to participat­e in work programs unless required by federal law or authorized by the Legislatur­e. Waivers are allowed under federal law under certain circumstan­ces, like an insufficie­nt number of jobs to provide employment.

Hobbs said she found the language too restrictiv­e in times of “economic challenges.’’

“This legislatio­n would inhibit our state’s ability to respond in these times to support Arizona families, retailers, and farmers, and would instead place additional strain on food banks,’’ she said.

On a related note, Hobbs rejected HB 2375, a proposal by Rep. Lupe Diaz, R-benson, to bar local government­s from adopting or enforcing any sort of “guaranteed income program.’’

Several cities across the country have approved pilot programs, including Phoenix which used COVID funds in 2022 to provide $1,000 a month to 1,000 low-income families for a year.

The governor said the restrictio­ns in the bill were overly broad and ‘could threaten programs Arizonans rely on such as housing, food, and emergency need programs if administra­ted at the local level.’’

She also vetoed a measure by Rep. Gail Griffin, R-hereford, that would have given Cochise County the opportunit­y to ask

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