For weeks, state leaders have insisted they could not identify the names of long-term care facilities with COVID-19 outbreaks because doing so would violate patient privacy laws. This, despite the fact that other states release similar information.
But now our state has admitted there was another (and I’m guessing, more pressing) reason they’ve refused: It turns out that information could be bad for business. And in Arizona, the business interests of private entities outweigh the concerns of consumers, even during a public health crisis.
Surprised?
We shouldn’t be. This is, after all, what it means to run government like a business. Private industries take center stage. Profits take precedence over people.
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Gov. Doug Ducey and his wealthy special interest pals were absolutely gleeful last week when the voter-approved education initiative known as the Invest in Education Act was overturned.
Ducey & Co. worked overtime to ensure that nearly $900 million in additional education dollars will never reach our classrooms and that our tragic underfunding of special education programs, our bottom-of-the-barrel per-pupil funding, and our teacher shortage crisis continue.
But it’s important for Arizonans to understand that schoolchildren and teachers are not the only ones adversely affected by this decision.
Our state constitution and the right of all Arizona citizens to create policy via the ballot has been greatly diminished, as well.