Oro Valley was incorporated in 1974 to allow more citizen input
In the 1970’s, a group of local citizens were worried that Pima County and Tucson would annex this area and they started an incorporation process. The result was the establishment of Oro Valley in 1974. The people that voted to incorporate did so because they did not want to be governed by the policies and mind set of Pima County or the City of Tucson.
One of the factors that made Oro Valley unique was the importance of community involvement and input on the Town’s development. Neighborhood meetings and citizen Boards and Commissions were established to provide a vehicle for citizen input to be given to the governing body – the Town Council.
Chiseling away at citizen input began about 8 years ago
About 8 years ago, the Town Council passed the Economic Expansion Zone ("EEZ"). Originally this allowed for fast-tracked development only in Innovation Park as long as there was no residence within 600 feet of the development. The development could be fast-tracked to the Council with only an Open House to introduce the development to the public. There was no requirement to go to the Planning and Zoning Commission. All the current building you now see in Innovation Park was a result of the EEZ code.
In 2018, the (Hiremath-led) Council amended the EEZ to eliminate the 600-foot residential buffer requirement and to allow for all Tech Park designations to be treated as an EEZ.
More citizen input limitations on the horizon
Now enter Town Manager, Mary Jacobs. A couple of months ago, Ms. Jacobs and her Economic Development Manager, J.J. Johnston sent a 14-page PDF to the Council explaining the new CEDS. The Council passed on the CEDS which mandated that staff come forward with changes to the Town’s zoning codes. Now these changes are coming before the Council for their approval.
Staff believes that these code changes are justified because this is how they do things in Tucson and Pima County. Remember, this is the reason we incorporated. We did not want to be like Tucson and Pima County. In the new CEDS, many of the now required neighborhood meetings are eliminated and many important decisions will be “administratively” approved by staff.
Town staff are not elected officials and not accountable to the citizens
It is not a good idea to allow the staff to make major decisions because the Town’s administration, including the Town Manager, is NOT accountable to the citizens. The Council is the elected body and the only part of the government that is accountable to you and me. The Council should remain the decision makers. There should be no allowance for administrative approvals. There should be no elimination of neighborhood meetings and other vehicles for citizen input.
The Council needs to tell Jacobs and Johnson that we are the decision makers and we wish to remain in that capacity. They need to vote NO on the CEDS code modifications.
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Mike Zinkin has a Bachelor’s degree in history and government from the University of Arizona and a Master’s degree in Social and Philosophical Foundations of Education from California State University, Northridge. He was a commissioned ensign in the United States Navy Reserve. He was an Air Traffic Controller for 30 years. He and his wife moved to Oro Valley in 1998. Mike served on the Oro Valley Development Review Board from 2005-2009 and the Board of Adjustment from 2011-2012. He served on the Town Council from 2012-2016 during which time he was named a Fellow for the National League of Cities University, he was a member of the National League of Cities Steering Committee for Community and Economic Development, and a member of the Arizona League of Cities Budget and Economic Development Committee.