(UPDATED) Phoenix, Tucson, and Flagstaff Mayors Slam Governor Ducey’s Decision to Remove COVID 19 Safety Measures

Governor Blow with the Reactionary Wind Doug Ducey has done it again. Not listening to (or consulting) local political and health leaders (at least the ones that do not belong to the same political party or fact-based universe,) Mr. Ducey, citing currently declining Coronavirus-related numbers,  has unilaterally removed virtually all COVID 19 health safety measures … Read more

(UPDATED) Mayor Regina Romero will ask Tucson City Council to Institute a Three Week Curfew to Combat COVID 19

On December 1, 2020,  Mayor Regina Romero will ask the Tucson City Council to institute a three-week curfew designed to combat the Coronavirus Pandemic and stem the surging tide of the virus. If the City Council approves the proposed ordinance and proclamation the Mayor and her team will present on December 1, 2020, this curfew … Read more

urban camping

Proposed Tucson Ordinances Spark Calls for Protest & Attendance at March 17 City Council Meeting

urban camping
Occupy Tucson tents in Veinte de Agosoto Park.

If your first amendment rights are important to you, you should start watching the Tucson City Council agendas very closely.

Embarrassed by the Safe Park quagmire and the subsequent scolding by the district court judge, City Attorney Mike Rankin wants to crack down … on them and on us.

Thanks to a tip and a Facebook event invite from local activists, I learned about two bad ordinances that were scheduled for tomorrow’s City Council meeting. (See items #13 and #14 on the agenda here.)

Ordiance Prohibiting Camping or City Sidewalks and Other City Property (PDF) seeks to prevent another Safe Park or Occupy Tucson from happening. The memo clearly states that “homelessness is not a crime, and only the conduct of camping, and not the state of homelessness, is prohibited by the Code.” So, where are the homeless supposed to go when there aren’t enough beds in shelters? Are they supposed to camp or sleep on private property– like one of those cute front yards in Armory Park?

Ordinance Providing for the Designation of a “Crowd Management Event” for the Purpose of Maintaining Public Safety (PDF) gives the Tucson police chief sweeping crowd control measures. The ordinance defines a “Crowd Management Event” as “a gathering of 100 or more persons that requires the provision of law enforcement services”; allows the chief to set geographic boundaries for the “Crowd Management Event”; prohibits people from entering or leaving the designated “crowd management” area; prohibits people inside the area from wearing masks or protective gear, like a gas mask. (Hmmm… just like shooting fish in a barrel with that pepper spray. What could go wrong?)

Read more