
PHOENIX - We have now completed a 2009 legislative session which was dominated by work on a balanced state budget, and yet failed to produce one. Or, if you prefer, failed to produce one that Gov. Jan Brewer would be willing to sign. This is in part the fault of the Legislature, in part the fault of the governor.
Of course, many in those provinces will tell you that it’s mainly the fault of the Secretary of Homeland Security. Janet Napolitano may now be keeping the nation safe, but she did not leave the state fiscally sound.
Having said that, the matter is no longer about assigning blame but charting a way out. And it’s also true that given the state’s revenue shrinkage amid the current recession, the budget would be under stress even if it hadn’t been grown too quickly. It would just be under less stress, and the solution set would be less painful. The state’s politicians are now about the business of distributing that pain, not a job most of them relish.
It’s against this fiscal backdrop that the subject of the Arizona’s gaming policy has come due for review. Briefly expressed, that policy holds that some number of the state’s Native American tribes shall be allowed indefinitely to reap billions of dollars from gambling receipts, and everyone else shall reap precious little.







