Arizona
Finally, a plan to force Arizona lawmakers to pay their speeding tickets | Opinion
Finally, a bill to end legislative immunity for Arizona’s lead foot lawmakers. But why should legislators remain immune from other laws?
5 safety tips for winter driving conditions in Arizona
Taking a trip up to Flagstaff or driving through Prescott during the Arizona winter? Here are five tips to stay safe when cruising on winter roads.
The Republic
Once again, Arizona’s legislators have the opportunity to bring an end to the outrageous practice of holding themselves above the law.
Well, traffic laws, at least.
House Judiciary Chairman Quang Nguyen on Friday introduced a resolution aimed at ending legislative immunity for speeding tickets.
“Elected officials should not have special privileges that allow them to break the law without accountability,” Nguyen said in announcing his bill.
“The people we serve are expected to follow traffic laws, and legislators should be no different. If a lawmaker is caught speeding, running a red light, or committing any other traffic violation, they should face the same consequences as everyone else.”
Nguyen’s bill comes after Sen. Mark Finchem, R-Prescott, became the latest lawmaker to invoke legislative immunity to wiggle out of a traffic ticket.
Finchem dodged a ticket, claiming immunity
Finchem was nailed near midnight on Jan. 25, clocked doing 48 mph in a 30 mph zone in Prescott.
Two days later, Prescott Police Chief Amy Bonney got a letter from the senator on Arizona Senate letterhead, demanding that the ticket “be voided and stricken from the record.”
The ticket was dismissed on Feb. 4.
Nice dodge if you can manage it. And Finchem adeptly managed it, as have a number of our esteemed leaders through the years. (See: ex-Sen. Justine Wadsack, R-71 mph in a 35 mph zone.)
That’s because the state constitution says legislators “shall be privileged from arrest in all cases except treason, felony, and breach of the peace and they shall not be subject to any civil process” while the Legislature is in session.
The legislative immunity clause was put into place during early statehood out of fear that rogue cops would pull over and detain legislators for bogus reasons, preventing them from reaching the state Capitol to vote.
Multiple lawmakers have used law to duck charges
So, now instead we have rogue legislators, careening down Arizona’s highways and byways at high speeds, unworried about limits that apply to us regular schmucks.
Immunity also has been used to duck a misdemeanor domestic violence arrest or an order of protection.
Gov. Doug Ducey asked the Legislature to put a repeal of legislative immunity on the 2020 ballot after a legislator claimed the privilege once being pulled over for doing more than 40 mph over the speed limit.
The Legislature wasn’t interested.
Now comes Nguyen’s House Concurrent Resolution 2053, asking voters to do away with immunity for lead foot lawmakers.
“No one should be above the rules of the road,” Nguyen said. “Lawmakers should follow the same laws they create and enforce. We are lawmakers, not lawbreakers.”
Well, most of you are, anyway.
Arizona voters should have their say on this
Finchem seems to think he’s entitled to break the law, telling Arizona Republic reporter Ray Stern the ticket “shouldn’t have been written in the first place.”
Not only should it have been written, but the ticket should be written again once the Legislature adjourns and there’s no danger that citing him at near midnight on a Friday in Prescott would prevent him from casting a vote at the closed-for-the-weekend Capitol in Phoenix.
Nguyen’s bill applies only to traffic offenses. No word on why legislators who commit misdemeanors outside their cars should be immune from following the law while the Legislature is in session. Still, Nguyen’s proposal is a welcome and long-overdue start.
Lawmakers should embrace their inner Finchem, put the pedal to the metal and drive that sucker right onto the 2026 ballot.
Reach Roberts at laurie.roberts@arizonarepublic.com. Follow her on X (formerly Twitter) at @LaurieRobertsaz, on Threads at @LaurieRobertsaz and on BlueSky at @laurieroberts.bsky.social.
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Arizona
NAU launches first-of-its-kind engineering degree to fast-track Arizona’s future workforce – The NAU Review
As Arizona’s semiconductor and advanced manufacturing industries continue to grow at a rapid pace, Northern Arizona University’s Steve Sanghi College of Engineering is launching a new degree program designed to help meet the state’s workforce needs.
Beginning this fall, NAU will offer a Bachelor of Professional Studies in Engineering Technology, a flexible, workforce-focused degree pathway that prepares students for careers in microelectronics, semiconductors and advanced manufacturing in as little as three years. The 90-credit bachelor’s degree creates a more accessible pathway into engineering careers through a hands-on, applied curriculum and a streamlined transfer model with Arizona community colleges.
The program follows a 45-45 completion structure, allowing students to complete 45 credits at a community college and 45 credits through NAU. Courses will be delivered through synchronous remote instruction at NAU’s North Valley campus in Phoenix and at Pima Community College in Tucson, increasing access for statewide students.
Addressing Arizona’s growing semiconductor workforce
Designed with workforce readiness in mind, the program emphasizes practical engineering application, systems implementation, testing, quality control, systems analysis, manufacturing, fabrication, process control and project management. Students will gain technical and problem-solving skills aligned with the needs of Arizona’s rapidly evolving manufacturing economy.
“This new bachelor’s degree empowers students to identify real-world engineering challenges and develop practical solutions,” said James Palmer, associate dean for academic affairs at the Steve Sanghi College of Engineering. “We are creating a more accessible pathway into engineering careers while preparing graduates to support Arizona’s growing microelectronics and semiconductor industry.”
Arizona has emerged as one of the nation’s fastest-growing semiconductor hubs, with more than $200 billion in semiconductor-related investments announced in the Greater Phoenix region since 2020, including expansions from Intel, TSMC and Amkor Technology. TSMC alone has committed up to $165 billion toward Arizona operations, including multiple fabrication plants and advanced packaging facilities expected to create thousands of technical and manufacturing jobs.
Industry demand continues to grow for professionals with applied engineering and advanced manufacturing skills in areas such as process engineering, manufacturing systems, equipment operations and yield enhancement. NAU’s new degree program was developed to help students quickly enter these high-demand career fields while supporting Arizona’s long-term economic growth and domestic semiconductor manufacturing capacity.
The program also aligns with NAU’s strategic commitment to expanding access to affordable, student-centered educational opportunities that prepare graduates for meaningful careers and long-term success.
Students interested in learning more about the Bachelor of Professional Studies in Engineering Technology program should contact SCE@nau.edu.
Arizona
GOP candidates pitch themselves the person to beat Arizona’s Democratic governor
PHOENIX (AP) — The two Republican congressmen running for Arizona governor pitched themselves at a debate Wednesday as the only candidate with broad enough voter appeal to unseat Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs amid the state’s affordability struggles.
U.S. Rep. Andy Biggs, who is the GOP primary’s frontrunner and has the endorsement of President Donald Trump, portrayed himself as being able to cross party lines and having the right experience to be the state’s chief executive.
“There’s not a doubt in my mind, if you look at the polling data that you’re going to find, I am the most competitive with Katie Hobbs of anybody on this stage in any Republican in the state,” Biggs said.
U.S. Rep. David Schweikert, who has survived three tough Democratic challenges in recent years, believes his focus on government finances and his drive to bring new business to the state make him the singular Republican candidate.
“These are wonderful people, but they’ve never actually been in the great battle,” Schweikert said of Biggs and two other Republican opponents.
Businessman Scott Neely, who ran an unsuccessful gubernatorial campaign in 2022, said after the debate that if Biggs wins the primary, Republicans will lose the election.
The winner of the July 21 primary will face Hobbs, who’s running unopposed in the primary.
Biggs has served five terms in the U.S. House, representing a heavily GOP district in the eastern Phoenix suburbs and serving at one time as chairman of the ultra-right U.S. House Freedom Caucus.
Before that, Biggs served in the Arizona Legislature from 2003 through 2016, including four years as president of the state Senate. He battled with then-Republican Gov. Jan Brewer on a Medicaid expansion in 2013 and pushed school choice measures and bills targeting abortion providers.
Biggs is one of Trump’s top defenders in Congress and supported Trump’s false claims the 2020 presidential election was stolen from him.
Schweikert, a budget hawk known for railing against government debt, has represented an affluent district that includes parts of northeast Phoenix and Scottsdale for eight terms. He served in the Arizona House in the 1990s and as Maricopa County’s treasurer in the 2000s.
Schweikert has focused his congressional career on sounding the alarm about the federal budget deficit and the ballooning U.S. debt, often in late-night speeches to a nearly empty House chamber and bleary-eyed C-SPAN viewers. Schweikert has praised Trump’s 2017 tax cuts but has called for more spending cuts to reduce federal borrowing.
His reputation was tarnished by ethics scandals. In 2022, he received a $125,000 fine by the Federal Election Commission for misappropriating campaign funds. Two years prior, he agreed to pay a $50,000 fine and accept 11 campaign finance violations after an investigation by the U.S. House Committee on Ethics. In his last three general campaigns for Congress, Schweikert staved off challenges from Democrats. Biggs voiced support for Arizona’s recent passage of a three-year moratorium on tax incentives for new data centers – a move Hobbs also has touted. “They shouldn’t be given a break,” Biggs said, noting the large amounts of power and water that data centers use.
Schweikert bemoaned Arizona’s unfavorable affordability rankings as “pretty miserable,” but said consumer prices don’t come down magically. He vowed to aggressively recruit businesses to Arizona and push for wage growth.
Both congressmen were asked about the expired healthcare subsidies for those getting coverage under the Affordable Care Act.
“We’re going to have to deal with the reality of subsidization of everything in the economy is not going to work,” Schweikert said.
Biggs said he introduced legislation in Congress to bring down healthcare costs and also voiced support for Trump’s proposal to send money directly to Americans for health savings accounts so they can handle insurance and health costs as they see fit.
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