City Council Ward 6 candidates differ on priorities for Tucson
Elected at a time when the country backed
Now there is a new Republican, architect
A third candidate,
The general election allows
On paper,
Both Kozachik and Rodriguez have, at one time or another, broken away from Republican politics.
In 2013, Kozachik told the Star he left the
"This party, whether it's on immigration, women's reproductive rights or the whole social panoply of issues ... is just out of touch with this community," said Kozachik.
Rodriguez said he left the
"At that time, the way that the
He said he has always been a conservative and rejoined the party last year.
Rodriguez has gained some international attention for his support for
After a profile in the Star, he was regularly interviewed by
Cease said he has been a loyal member of the
It's the economy, stupid
Rodriguez says he has heard the same complaint over and over again on the campaign trail -- that there is no accountability inside city hall or on the council.
"The roads are a prime example. I've been telling people, you know I've been here for 30 years and we've pretty much had the same problems all along," he said. "The city has been promising and promising to fix this stuff and they don't see anything."
He worries that the seven
"I think a lot of the stuff that they do is perceived more or less with the heart instead of actually thinking about the overall shape we are in," Rodriguez said.
Rodriguez said he can work across the aisle, although he admits it will be an uphill battle at times.
"Some of these people are focusing more on national politics in their newsletters and stuff like that and trying to report on what's going on nationally -- which doesn't affect us for while," he said. "We have to start from the bottom up and actually think about what's best for our city and how can we solve our problems."
For Kozachik, who is well-known for dragging his budget books into meetings, the issue continues to be the financial health of the city.
For the last two years, the council has boasted of structurally balanced budget, but Kozachik isn't satisfied that the city is prepared for unforeseen issues.
"We've pretty well maintained services throughout the community, what we haven't done well is ... built up a contingency fund," Kozachik said. "Tucson Water has no capital reserve to speak of, so we have to build up those contingencies."
It gets worse for the city itself.
"Our contingency was
The problem, he says, is the city still has a large pension obligation that was made even worse by two recent unfavorable court decisions.
"Someone else writes the rules and we write the checks," Kozachik said.
The council could have opted for a new pension repayment schedule like
"We have got to rip the Band-Aid off and say 'we've got to deal with this,' because it's not going to go away. You can't keep paying the minimum payment on the credit card and expect to get out of the hole," he said.
For Cease, he sees two issues facing the city -- income inequality and environmental sustainability.
"We believe that those are not separate issues, those are directly connected," Cease said.
Cease proposes a solution to both, what he calls the "green new deal for
He wants the city to start a revolving fund to offer low-interest loans to residents to make their homes more energy-efficient as well as compatible with solar panels.
"We're going to create local fair-wage jobs to retrofit thousands of homes and businesses with energy conservation and solar energy and water harvesting," Cease said.
Cease argues there is more direct way to help boost
"Study after study has shown that that's the single most important thing you can do to improve the economy for all," Cease said.
Hire more police officers, say two
Cease argues that the focus shouldn't be whether the city is meeting a national standard when it comes to the number of officers patrolling the street.
"In a way that is the wrong question," he said. "I'm not saying staffing isn't an important issue. I think there are larger issues than, you know, how many people do we hire. I think we need to ask what is the mission for each department and not just for public safety."
For Kozachik, the city is working to recruit new officers but he is concerned the city would have to lower standards to hire enough new officers.
"Recruiting for law enforcement right now is a tough sell. We will go through 750 to 1,000 applicants to get an academy of qualified people," he said.
"I'm not inclined to lower our standards so that we wind up with a situation like in some other parts of the country where you have bad actors out there carrying guns and throwing their weight around."
Kozachik says complaints that
"We gave them a pay increase in 2013. I happen to know because I voted against it and they (police officers' union) pulled their endorsement (of him)," Kozachik said. "I voted against it because we were still in a
Rodriguez sayd the city should hire more than 300 new officers to meet national standards.
"Statistics-wise we're supposed to have 1,200," he said.
Rodriguez says the city continues to lose trained police officers to other jurisdiction for a number of reasons, including pay.
He supports pay raises as well, saying it's a small price to pay when comparing it to the cost of training new officers.
In terms of the cost to hire new officers as well as give existing officers pay raises, Rodriguez says the solution to him is simple -- a refocus on core services.
Economic development comes in different forms
Kozachik says offering tax incentives to attract new businesses has been a good strategy for the city but cautioned that it needs to be done on a project-by-project basis.
"Every project rises and falls on its own merits," he said.
He offered two areas he said could help revitalize the area's economy.
One is the proposed creation of a highway, to be known as the Sonoran Corridor, that would connect
Kozachik said the state does offer some movie-making incentives, but said
"What we offer is a location: You can bring your crew into downtown and get an urban setting, and in 30 minutes you are in the Sonoran Desert. And in 30 minutes in the other direction you're up on top of a mountain with evergreens," he said.
Incentives are good, Rodriguez said, but he wants to see them go to local businesses whenever possible and that there should be a "good return on investment by the city."
"We can't just be offering incentives just to attract businesses here," he said. "Primarily because we have a lot of struggling businesses here that also need help."
A platform Cease has mentioned at debates is for the city to help foster the green economy by promoting water harvesting and energy conservation.
He also does not believe in incentives to bring in new businesses.
"Bringing in outside firms and recruiting them and offer them subsidies has largely failed us," he said, adding that companies come for the incentives but then "more or less exploit us" by paying low wages and polluting the local environment.
Respond: Write a letter to the editor -- Write a guest opinion
Subscribe now for 99¢ per week
Contact reporter
___
(c)2017 The Arizona Daily Star (Tucson, Ariz.)
Visit The Arizona Daily Star (Tucson, Ariz.) at www.tucson.com
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



EDITORIAL: Continuing lapses: Perkins loans, children’s health funds should be stable parts of the federal budget
Expressing empathy remains a challenge for Trump
Advisor News
- Guaranteed income streams help preserve assets later in retirement
- Economic pressures make boomerang living the new normal
- Pay or Die: The scare tactics behind LA County’s Measure ER tax increase
- How to listen to what your client isn’t saying
- Strong underwriting: what it means for insurers and advisors
More Advisor NewsAnnuity News
- Guaranteed income streams help preserve assets later in retirement
- MassMutual turns 175, Marking Generations of Delivering on its Commitments
- ALIRT Insurance Research: U.S. Life Insurance Industry In Transition
- My Annuity Store Launches a Free AI Annuity Research Assistant Trained on 146 Carrier Brochures and Live Annuity Rates
- Ameritas settles with Navy vet in lawsuit over disputed annuity sale
More Annuity NewsHealth/Employee Benefits News
- CMS rule cracks down on ACA fraud and strengthens state control
- HHS Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Issues Notice for Medicare and Medicaid Programs; Quarterly Listing of Program Issuances-January Through March 2026
- Waco employees may see 7% hike for health coverage
Waco eyes 7% increase in employee health plan premiums, cut to GLP-1 coverage
- Navigating Medicaid's changing landscape
- Hawaii’s fight against Medicaid fraud plagued for over a decade
More Health/Employee Benefits NewsLife Insurance News
- Pacific Life Launches New Flagship Variable Universal Life Insurance Product
- NAIFA launches “NAIFA Cares” initiative to help build long-term financial security for children
- The fiduciary standard for life insurance is here
- GenAI: Moving to the forefront of claims management
- 2025 Insurance Abstracts
More Life Insurance News