PR: Statement by Jim Ward on Passage of Health Care Reform

Jim Ward

(PHOENIX, AZ) November 8, 2009 – “Today is a sad day for Americans who value their freedom to make their own health care decisions without interference by the federal government. In voting to approve the liberal-led agenda on Health Care Reform, Representative Harry Mitchell has let down the constituents of Congressional District 5 once again.

While there’s no question our health care system needs reform, the plan pushed by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and her Democratic allies including Harry Mitchell will saddle our economy with staggering costs and create another enormous government bureaucracy. I urge voters in our district to hold Mitchell accountable for his lack of leadership and blind support of this disastrous policy.

My promise to voters is that, if elected, I will fight for the right kind of health care reform based on common sense such as: medical malpractice reform (to reduce costs), availability of health insurance across state lines (to increase competition and reduce costs), changing the tax code to enhance health care savings accounts (allowing the provider and the patient to work together), creating high risk pools for pre-existing conditions and portability of coverage.”

For more information or to arrange an interview with Jim Ward, contact Katie Cobb.

Duel in the Desert rematch: Toughest Sheriff v. Toughest Prosecutor

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DuelintheDesert

Parents More Concerned with Money Than Education

Arizona voters took to the polls on Tuesday and not only said “No” but a resounding “Hell No” to bonds on any given range of topic.  Alex Bloom from AZCentral, in this article postulates that the resounding NO on school funding had to do with the state  of the economy.

The economy apparently was on voters’ minds Tuesday when they walked into Valley voting booths to address school-district spending through bonds and budget overrides.

Valley voters supported only 20 of the 36 school-district bonds and budget overrides on the ballot in Maricopa County, according to unofficial results. That was down considerably from last year, when voters supported 28 of 31 budget measures. Voters’ action comes amid a period of deep cuts to state education spending because of the state budget crisis.

Experts say the economic downturn probably made voters think twice about approving many budget overrides, which allow school districts to maintain or increase property-tax levels.

Alex Bloom’s commentary totally ignores the fact that the Arizona school system has failed and continues to fail to educate our children.

Matthew Ladner from the Goldwater Institute:

The news is not good. Arizona has stalled out with bad scores.

With a score nine points below the national average, Arizona 4th graders know almost a grade level less math than the average American student. Florida and Texas–states with similar levels of spending and student demographics–both scored above the national average.

With marked predictability, the state-run media lays the blame at the feet of the people who are most affected by ill-run policy, rather than hold accountable those who are actually responsible for this dismal performance.

Mr Ladner continues:

Public school apologists can recite their litany on spending and learned helplessness, but don’t expect any results, they imply, until Arizona has the combination of old money, hedge fund billionaires and high income tax rates of Connecticut.

Despite a reform push during the 1990s, the fact is that on the whole Arizona is a K-12 backwater and will remain so until it decides to get serious about reform. Since the 1990s, Arizona’s AIMS has been dummied down, and the positive impact of choice programs have been drowned by enrollment growth. Rome continues to burn, we continue to fiddle.

In a recent post, I pointed out that “industry experts” [like Justin Olson, senior research analyst at the Arizona Tax Research Association and the Peoria Unified, Phoenix Union High and Dysart Unified district officials] are always “shocked, stunned and surprised” when things don’t turn out as they see them through their rose-colored glasses.

The voters here in the great state of Arizona are no longer buying the same tired message of “We are not spending enough on education”.  What we are seeing is that the monies we are spending on educating our children is not delivering anything close to acceptable results. See for yourself here how Arizona ranks at the very bottom in national educational ranking.

Mr Bloom’s theory that we are more concerned with the economy than our children’s education affronts all concerned parents sensibilities.  I can easily do without my Starbucks Venti, but you had better be educating my children well enough to be able to compete in the 21st century global economy.

The Arizona school systems, like Alex Bloom, both get an “F