Let’s Talk Politics
8:30 – 10:00 am
Sedona Community Center
2615 Melody Lane, Sedona
Contact:
Barbara Litrell – LWV
928.649.0135
[email protected]
Join us on the corner of 89A and Coffee Pot
Bring a sign or use one of ours.
Stand up for Democracy and Progressive values.
Join us at the DORR Office!
We will make calls to voters encouraging them to Vote!
EVERY THURSDAY!!!!!
Time: 5-7pm
DORR 1385 89A (across from Whole Foods)
Contact:
Leah Hammond
720.499.2872
[email protected]
Volunteer to canvass any day, anytime!!! We need you!!
Call Cathy!
(928) 220-5391
[email protected]
Join us to Canvass. Cathy makes it fun! You can go out with a friend or accompany an experienced canvasser. We need drivers too to help canvassers get to different locations. We need you! Please join us!!!
Cathy Rutherford
928.220.5391 or DORR (928) 212.1357
[email protected]
Join Us in getting out the VOTE!!!
We’ll meet at Judy’s house and canvass the Village of Oak Creek. You can go out with a friend or Judy will pair your with a partner. You can choose to drive people to different locations in the neighborhood and provide your car as a watering hole and cooling station. Contact Judy for info. FUN!!!
Please call Cathy for the location
(928) 220-5391
[email protected]
Road Trip – Call for Volunteers
“Putting the Squeeze on Allen, Thorpe & Blackman”
We need Canvassers, Canvass Buddies and Drivers for a Payson Day of Action!
Next Saturday, October 27th, DORR and the White River Democrats are combining forces in Payson to canvass for the LD6 and Statewide Democratic Candidates. White River volunteers from the North and DORR volunteers from the West will put the squeeze on Sylvia Allen, Bob Thorpe and Walt Blackman.
There are 2,000 Democrats and Democratic-leaning registered voters in Payson (compare that with 3,000 in Sedona). We have done a great job thus far in Sedona and in our joint effort in Cottonwood. We will extend that success to Payson, where Republicans are taking their support for granted! Let’s support this joint effort to help local Payson activists deliver an unwelcome surprise to these reactionary career politicians on November 6th.
RSVP: Cathy Rutherford [email protected] or 928-220-5391.
Carpooling will be arranged.
learn about the critical issues affecting our world.
Visit DORR’s website at www.sedonadorr.org for more info!
Democrats of the Red Rocks
P.O. Box 1165 Sedona AZ 86339
928-212-1357
JOIN US!!!
Canvassing in Cottonwood on Saturday!!!!
If it’s your first time canvassing, we’ll make sure you go with an experienced canvasser.
Bring friend too!
Please contact Cathy for the meet up place:
Cathy
(928) 220-5391
[email protected]
Political Book Club!
“Fascism A Warning Sign”
Madeline Albright
Call for location:
Barbara Litrell
(928) 649. 0135
Join us to Canvass. Cathy makes it fun! You can go out with a friend or accompany an experienced canvasser. We need drivers too to help canvassers get to different locations. We need you! Please join us!!!
Cathy Rutherford
928.220.5391 or DORR (928) 212.1357
[email protected]
Join Us in getting out the VOTE!!!
We’ll meet at Judy’s house and canvass the Village of Oak Creek. You can go out with a friend or Judy will pair your with a partner. You can choose to drive people to different locations in the neighborhood and provide your car as a watering hole and cooling station. Contact Judy for info. FUN!!!
Please call Cathy for the location
(928) 220-5391
[email protected]
Two more opportunities: The League of Women Voters Greater Verde Valley two more ballot review parties on its calendar. The parties are gathering where we go over our very complicated election ballot. The last two on our schedule are in private homes, one in the Chapel area of Sedona on Sunday, Oct 28 at 3 PM and the other in the Village of Oak Creek on Monday, Oct 29 at 4PM.
Someone from LWVGVV will be on hand to go over the various offices that up for election. Special attention will be paid to the ballot proposals. There are five state-wide ballot proposals and several local ones. We have heard from this who have already attended ballot parties that they found them helpful. It’s a fun way to get together and share any questions before the November 6 election.
If you are interested in attending, please reply to this email and I can provide addresses and directions. Thanks for voting!
Kathy Kinsella
President
League of Women Voters Greater Verde Valley
Two more opportunities: The League of Women Voters Greater Verde Valley two more ballot review parties on its calendar. The parties are gathering where we go over our very complicated election ballot. The last two on our schedule are in private homes, one in the Chapel area of Sedona on Sunday, Oct 28 at 3 PM and the other in the Village of Oak Creek on Monday, Oct 29 at 4PM.
Someone from LWVGVV will be on hand to go over the various offices that up for election. Special attention will be paid to the ballot proposals. There are five state-wide ballot proposals and several local ones. We have heard from this who have already attended ballot parties that they found them helpful. It’s a fun way to get together and share any questions before the November 6 election.
If you are interested in attending, please reply to this email and I can provide addresses and directions. Thanks for voting!
Kathy Kinsella
President
League of Women Voters Greater Verde Valley
Volunteer to canvass any day, anytime!!! We need you!!
Call Cathy!
(928) 220-5391
[email protected]
Tuesday, October 30th: Chalk The Vote
Buy some chalk and get to work! Draw some creative voting reminders around your community (sidewalks, streets, college campuses, shopping centers, etc). If you’re in a state with early voting, remind people where their polling places are located.
This is another fun, refreshing way to encourage your neighbors to fulfill their civic responsibilities!
Volunteer to canvass any day, anytime!!! We need you!!
Call Cathy!
(928) 220-5391
[email protected]
Volunteer to canvass any day, anytime!!! We need you!!
Call Cathy!
(928) 220-5391
[email protected]
Join us on the corner of 89A and Coffee Pot
Bring a sign or use one of ours.
Stand up for Democracy and Progressive values.
Phone Banking
Wednesday, November 1st, 4-7 p.m.
Thursday, November 2nd, 4-7 p.m.
Also:
Monday, November 5th, all day
Tuesday, November 6th, all day
Join us at the DORR Office!
We will make calls to voters encouraging them to Vote!
EVERY THURSDAY!!!!!
Time: 5-7pm
DORR 1385 89A (across from Whole Foods)
Contact:
Leah Hammond
720.499.2872
[email protected]
Volunteer to canvass any day, anytime!!! We need you!!
Call Cathy!
(928) 220-5391
[email protected]
Phone Banking
Wednesday, November 1st, 4-7 p.m.
Thursday, November 2nd, 4-7 p.m.
Also:
Monday, November 5th, all day
Tuesday, November 6th, all day
Volunteer to canvass any day, anytime!!! We need you!!
Call Cathy!
(928) 220-5391
[email protected]
Join us to Canvass. Cathy makes it fun! You can go out with a friend or accompany an experienced canvasser. We need drivers too to help canvassers get to different locations. We need you! Please join us!!!
Cathy Rutherford
928.220.5391 or DORR (928) 212.1357
[email protected]
Join Us in getting out the VOTE!!!
We’ll meet at Judy’s house and canvass the Village of Oak Creek. You can go out with a friend or Judy will pair your with a partner. You can choose to drive people to different locations in the neighborhood and provide your car as a watering hole and cooling station. Contact Judy for info. FUN!!!
Please call Cathy for the location
(928) 220-5391
[email protected]
JOIN US!!!
Canvassing in Cottonwood on Saturday!!!!
If it’s your first time canvassing, we’ll make sure you go with an experienced canvasser.
Bring friend too!
Please contact Cathy for the meet up place:
Cathy
(928) 220-5391
[email protected]
Dear Friend,
We have decided to cancel our monthly meetings at the Cottonwood Library (the monthly NAZCCA meeting will continue to be held at the Library on the 1st Saturday of each month from 12:30-1:45). Thanks to all who have attended in the past.
Moving forward we will be using this email list to share important information with you on actions you can take to help restore our Constitution and democracy to our nation.
The MOST important thing you can do right now is encourage all of your friends and family (regardless of where they live) to register to vote and vote in the upcoming primaries and general election in November. And make sure you are registered to vote and that you cast your ballot in these so very important elections. This is the best way that you can make your voice heard.
You can also continue to write, text, fax, email your Members of Congress and let them know how you feel about specific issues. One way of doing this is to text the word RESIST to the number 50409.
Shelley
Join us to plan July strategies!
*Gather signatures on our petitions to local, state, and national leaders in Arizona.
*How can we support the
can Energy for a Healthy Arizona bill?
*We have some ideas! Come and share yours and Get Involved. Our planet depends on it!!!
Join us to Canvass. Cathy makes it fun! You can go out with a friend or accompany an experienced canvasser. We need drivers too to help canvassers get to different locations. We need you! Please join us!!!
Cathy Rutherford
928.220.5391 or DORR (928) 212.1357
[email protected]
Join Us in getting out the VOTE!!!
We’ll meet at Judy’s house and canvass the Village of Oak Creek. You can go out with a friend or Judy will pair your with a partner. You can choose to drive people to different locations in the neighborhood and provide your car as a watering hole and cooling station. Contact Judy for info. FUN!!!
Please call Cathy for the location
(928) 220-5391
[email protected]
Phone Banking
Monday, November 5th, all day
Tuesday, November 6th, all day
Also:
Wednesday, November 1st, 4-7 p.m.
Thursday, November 2nd, 4-7 p.m.
Volunteer to canvass any day, anytime!!! We need you!!
Call Cathy!
(928) 220-5391
[email protected]
Tuesday, November 6th: #WalkoutToVote in partnership with the Future Coalition
Today’s the day! At 10:00 AM local time, students across the country will walk out of school or work to their local polling place. If you don’t have school or work on November 6th, just GO VOTE! Visit WalkoutToVote.org to register your walkout, get the #WalkoutToVote toolkit, and join the online community.
For #WalkoutToVote, March For Our Lives is partnering with the Future Coalition, a coalition of 20 youth-led organizations working together to create change. #WalkoutToVote is a collective action that will bring together the entire youth movement to go vote on election day.
In addition to March for Our Lives, the Future Coalition is led by Activism on the Road, B.R.A.V.E., Bridge the Divide, Bulletproof Ballot Project, Chicago Fuerte, Orange Generation, Indivisible Students, March on the NRA, Moco4Change, National Die In, National School Walkout, Parents Promise to Kids, Peace Warriors, Shattering the Silence, S.T.O.R.M., Student Voice, Team Enough, Zero Hour, and 50 Miles More.
(Remember: 50% off Lyft rides on Election Day).
LWVAZ stand on Propositions on Nov. 6 Ballot
No on Proposition 305
The non-partisan League of Women Voters of Arizona urges a NO vote on Proposition 305 in order to stop a law passed by the AZ Legislature in 2017. That law expands the AZ Empowerment Scholarship Account program (known as ESA) to all students in AZ.
Passage of Proposition 305 would result in a major step toward privatizing education in our state. The League of Women Voters and the AZ Constitution both speak to ensuring that the state provides adequate funds for a PUBLIC education for all AZ students. Neither the League of Women Voters nor the AZ Constitution speak to a state role in providing funds for private education.
Expanding Empowerment Scholarship Accounts (ESA), also known as vouchers, to more students will take away public money badly needed for our already underfunded public schools both traditional and charter. The public schools monies given to the child for an ESA are put on a debit card and given to the parent for payment of private school tuition including religious schools, home schooling or other ‘qualified’ expenses. There is little or no accounting by the state of how these monies are actually used.
Also almost all private/religious school tuition is significantly more than the amount on the debit card. As a result, the ESA/voucher program has been used almost exclusively by wealthy families to subsidize the cost of the private education they would be using for their children in the first place. Passage of Proposition 305 will continue a frightening trend toward a dual education system – one for the very wealthy and one for those the rest of us.
The League of Women Voters believes a strong democracy includes a free and quality public education for all children. Vote NO on Proposition 305.
No on Prop. 306
The non partisan League of Women Voters of Arizona urges a NO vote on Proposition 306, the Arizona Legislature’s attempt to weaken the AZ Clean Election Law by limiting the independence of the AZ Citizens Clean Elections Commission and making it subject to partisan control.
The League of Women Voters helped draft the original initiative that created the AZ Clean Elections Law and worked for its passage in 1998. The AZ Clean Elections Law is a model nationwide for public financing of elections. It is the Voters’ Voice in the enforcement of our campaign finance laws and it provides objective and timely voter information to all Arizona voters.
The statewide Commission that oversees the AZ Clean Elections Law was intentionally created to be a nonpartisan and independent entity. The commission’s rule making authority granted to it by the initiative has maintained its independence while providing adequate opportunities for public comment on such rules.
The Arizona Legislature’s proposed revision to the AZ Clean Elections Commission’s rule making process will allow a totally partisan entity, appointed only by the Governor, to oversee the Commission’s rule making, thus removing its independence. Passage of Proposition 306 will likely weaken the commission’s ability to oversee the enforcement of campaign finance laws, to maintain adequate oversight of the funding it provides to Clean Election Candidates and could even curtail its valuable voter education program.
We need to Strengthen NOT weaken the AZ Clean Elections Law and keep partisan politics out of campaign financing. Vote NO on Proposition 306.
LWVGVV stand on Yavapai and Coconino County propositions in the Verde Valley
Proposition 416 (Coconino County): Whether to change from a partisan election of superior court judges to a merit selection and judicial retention election of superior court judges. LWVGVV support this proposition.
Background:
• The Arizona Constitution, as stipulated in Article 6, §40, allows for counties with a population under 250,000 persons to choose to select its judges of the superior court as if it had a population of 250,000 or more persons.
• When a county’s population exceeds 250,000 as documented by the U.S. Census, that county automatically enters the merit selection system. Only Maricopa, Pima and Pinal counties exceed that population threshold.
• Other counties may choose to adopt merit selection by popular vote. Currently, Superior Court Judges (in Coconino County) are elected in a partisan primary, then rarely face an opponent in general elections.
LWV position in support of this proposition: The League of Women Voters of Arizona supports the selection of judges by appointment, with voter approval for retention; a judicial nominating commission, responsible to the governor; and a competency review commission.
Proposition 417 (Coconino County): Shall the Coconino County Community College District be authorized to continue to levy the current secondary property tax in the amount of $2,226,000, beginning in tax year 2019, for seven years.
The incremental funding to be used to:
• Initiate new career and technical education and training programs that prepare Coconino County students for jobs in Coconino County including related costs; and
• Develop new programs to support veterans’ training for civilian jobs including related costs; and
• Develop new programs to train and re-train Coconino County workers, in conjunction with Coconino County employers and expand current job training programs including related costs; and
• Enhance educational services throughout Coconino County, including communities such as Page, Tuba City, and Williams, including related costs; and
• Encourage and support lifelong learning programs, including related costs.
LWV position in support of this proposition: Funds for education in Arizona are collected through district property taxes and equalized through state income and sales taxes from the State’s General Fund. In addition, the League supports: Bond and override funds determined by a majority of district voters. LWVGVV supports this proposition
Proposition 446 (City of Sedona): The proposal on the Nov. 6 ballot would establish a permanent expenditure limit of approximately $25.2 million. This proposition was brought to the ballot by a citizens’ initiative.
Background: Voter-approved expenditure limitations- azauditor.gov/reports-publications/cities-and-towns/faqs/voter-approved-expenditure-limitations
What is the difference between an alternative expenditure limitation (home rule), permanent base adjustment, and a one-time override?
Home rule—Arizona Constitution, Article IX, §20(9), allows a city or town to adopt an alternative expenditure limitation (home rule) with voter approval at a regularly scheduled election for the nomination or election of its governing board members. A home rule prescribes the method the city or town will use to calculate its own expenditure limitation each year. Voters must approve a home rule prior to the first fiscal year in which it applies. Home rules apply for 4 succeeding fiscal years, after which the constitutional expenditure limitation becomes effective, unless voters adopt a new home rule.
Permanent base adjustment—Arizona Constitution, Article IX, §20(6), allows a city or town to permanently adjust its base limit with voter approval at a regularly scheduled general election or at a nonpartisan election held for the nomination or election of its governing board members. The Economic Estimates Commission will use the adjustment to calculate the constitutional expenditure limitation beginning with the fiscal year immediately following the fiscal year that voters approve the permanent base adjustment. Permanent base adjustments apply to all future years; however, voters may adopt additional adjustments.
May a city or town under home rule adopt a permanent base adjustment? Yes. A city or town under home rule may adopt a permanent base adjustment. The Economic Estimates Commission will use the adjusted base limit to calculate the city’s or town’s constitutional expenditure limitation for the year following a permanent base adjustment’s voter approval. However, the city or town is still subject to its home rule if the home rule has not expired.
Issues: Brought to the voters by initiative (which has never been done in AZ) with no fiscal background on calculation of expenditures limits and no involvement from the city government. If approved, it would effectively cap all future city’s spending to roughly half of the city’s annual expenditures for the past five years.
LWV believes that both home rule and permanent base adjustments are appropriate tools to be used by government entities when determining their expenditure levels. Both processes are invited public participation, are transparent and accountable to the public through approval of the governing bodies and voted upon by the public. This proposition was not created with public participation or approval of the city council to send it to the ballot. Because of lack of public participation and lack of transparency on the determination of the expenditure limit – LWVGVV opposes Proposition 446.
Proposition 447 (Sedona-Oak Creek School District): Adopt a General Maintenance and Operation Budget that includes an amount of up to 15% in excess of the revenue control limit for the 2019/2020 fiscal year and for six subsequent years (subject to certain reductions provided by statute in years six and seven). The District’s current 15% budget override is by law required to be reduced by one-third in each of 2019/2020 and 2020/2021. Because the existing override reduces by one-third in fiscal year 2019/2020, the proposed 15% override budget will be approximately $274,488 higher than the District’s 2019/2020 alternate budget and the District’s secondary tax rate required to fund this amount is estimated to be $0.05 per one hundred dollars of net limited assessed property valuation.
The total budget override amount is estimated to be $823,464 and would be funded by an estimated $0.15 tax rate, which is approximately equal to the current tax rate levied for the existing override. In future years the amount of the increase, if any, will be as provided by law.
Continued funding for programs currently serving district students – art/music, PE, school safety and security, technology enhancements, smaller class sizes, all day kindergarten.
LWV position in support of this proposition: Funds for education in Arizona are collected through district property taxes and equalized through state income and sales taxes from the State’s General Fund. In addition, the League supports: Bond and override funds determined by a majority of district voters. LWVGVV supports this proposition
VOTE!!!!
Actually, your vote does matter!!!
We’re thinking about 100% turnout!!!!!
Be there!!!!!
Voting Information for Sedona and VOC:
Yavapai County Recorder Elections Department: 928-771-3248
Coconino County Recorder Elections Department: 928-679-7860
General Election:
Last day to get on the Permanent Early Voting List (PEVL, mail-in-ballot) is October 26, 2018.
Mail-in-ballot need to be mailed by October 31st. Before or after October 31st,, ballots can dropped in drop box on East side of Sedona City Hall, or drop off at early vote center, or drop off at polling place on election day. Have the envelope sealed and no ID is required.
Early Vote Centers: Open: Wednesday, October 10 – November 2nd
Yavapai County: 10 South 6th Street, Cottonwood, AZ. Monday-Friday, 8 pm-5 pm
Coconino County: Sedona City Hall, Monday-Thursday, 7 am – 6 pm (Note ends November 1st as they don’t do it on Fridays.)
Election Day, November 6th
Vote Centers (Yavapai County only has Vote Centers, which are the same as polling places, except for the fact that voters can vote at any vote center that is in their county.)
Sedona or VOC (Yavapai County): Sedona Elks Lodge, 110 Airport Road open or VOCA Community Center 690 Bell Rock Blvd
Polling Place for Coconino (Coconino County has Polling Places by precinct. You need to live in that precinct to vote there and they also have Vote Centers where, as long as you live in that county, you can go to any Voting Center. Voting Centers have the ability to print any ballot for that county. That being said there are no Vote Centers in Sedona. See Below for Flagstaff Vote Centers.)
Polling Place: Chapel and Uptown: Christ Lutheran Church
Coconino County Vote Centers (Anyone who lives in Coconino County can vote at any of the Coconino County Vote Centers.)
NAU Walkup Skydome & VOTE CENTER, 1705 S San Francisco St, Flagstaff
Flagstaff Mall & VOTE CENTER, 4650 N US Highway 89, Flagstaff
Tuba City High School & VOTE CENTER, 67 Warrior Dr, Tuba City