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ContributorsGrant, Michael, 1951- (Host) / Sommer, Anthony (Panelist) / Bommersbach, Jana (Panelist) / Jennings, Max (Panelist) / Public Broadcasting Service (Broadcaster)
Created1985-05-31
DescriptionPre-recorded Friday Edition. Panelists discuss sheriff's office drug busts, police department civilian review boards, utility rate increases, and city planning issues. Panelists include Max Jennings, Executive Editor, Mesa Tribune; Anthony Sommer, Statehouse Reporter, Phoenix Gazette; Jana Bommersbach, Associate Editor, New Times.
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ContributorsGrant, Michael, 1951- (Host) / Jennings, Max (Panelist) / Bommersbach, Jana (Panelist) / Sommer, Anthony (Panelist) / Public Broadcasting Service (Broadcaster)
Created1986-02-28
DescriptionFriday Edition. Panelist discuss Gosnell land swap proposals (along with other local development propositions} and effluent sales contracts with Palo Verde. Panelists discuss Jana Bommersbach, Associate Editor, New Times; Anthony Sommer, Statehouse Reporter, Phoenix Gazette; Keven Ann Willey, Legislative Reporter, Arizona Republic; Max Jennings, Executive Editor, Mesa Tribune.
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ContributorsGrant, Michael, 1951- (Host) / Jennings, Max (Panelist) / Bommersbach, Jana (Panelist) / Kolbe, John W., 1940- (Panelist) / Public Broadcasting Service (Broadcaster)
Created1986-03-21
Description
Friday Edition. Panelists discuss Arizona Legislature issues (infighting, bar owner liability, insurance, and the Rio Salado Project), the Westinghouse bill, and the ongoing Gosnell land swap attempt. Panelists include John Kolbe, Political Editor, Phoenix Gazette; Jana Bommersbach, Associate Editor, New Times; Max Jennings, Executive Editor, Mesa Tribune; Howard Fischer, Phoenix

Friday Edition. Panelists discuss Arizona Legislature issues (infighting, bar owner liability, insurance, and the Rio Salado Project), the Westinghouse bill, and the ongoing Gosnell land swap attempt. Panelists include John Kolbe, Political Editor, Phoenix Gazette; Jana Bommersbach, Associate Editor, New Times; Max Jennings, Executive Editor, Mesa Tribune; Howard Fischer, Phoenix Bureau Chief, Arizona Daily Star.
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ContributorsGrant, Michael, 1951- (Host) / Bommersbach, Jana (Panelist) / Jennings, Max (Panelist) / Public Broadcasting Service (Broadcaster)
Created1985-09-27
DescriptionPre-recorded Friday Edition. Panelists discuss double-dipping, travel expenditures of politicians, gubernatorial elections, and city planning. Panelists include Don Harris, Political and Labor Writer, Arizona Republic; Jana Bommersbach, Associate Editor, New Times; Max Jennings, Executive Editor, Mesa Tribune.
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ContributorsGrant, Michael, 1951- (Host) / Sommer, Anthony (Panelist) / Bommersbach, Jana (Panelist) / Public Broadcasting Service (Broadcaster)
Created1985-10-11
DescriptionPre-recorded Friday Edition. Panelists discuss sales tax-funded highway construction projects, water quality and infrastructure projects, and city planning projects. Panelists include Keven Ann Willey, Legislative Reporter, Arizona Republic; Anthony Sommer, State House Reporter, Phoenix Gazette; Jana Bommersbach, Associate Editor, New Times.
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ContributorsGrant, Michael, 1951- (Host) / Bommersbach, Jana (Panelist) / Jennings, Max (Panelist) / Public Broadcasting Service (Broadcaster)
Created1985-11-08
DescriptionPre-recorded Friday Edition. Panelists discuss voting results and city development projects. Panelists include Don Harris, Political and Labor Writer, Arizona Republic; Jana Bommersbach, Associate Editor, New Times; Max Jennings, Executive Editor, Mesa Tribune.
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ContributorsWaits, Mary Jo (Contributor) / Raja, Rupam (Contributor) / Leland, Karen (Contributor) / Schick, Cherylene (Contributor) / Morrison Institute for Public Policy (Publisher)
Created1998-10
Description

Arizonans have been divided in their feelings about growth and what to do about it, especially during the past two decades. To complicate matters, the debate over the best responses to growth has been drawn along overly simplistic lines—the economy versus the environment. Arizonans who follow the myriad issues related

Arizonans have been divided in their feelings about growth and what to do about it, especially during the past two decades. To complicate matters, the debate over the best responses to growth has been drawn along overly simplistic lines—the economy versus the environment. Arizonans who follow the myriad issues related to urban growth closely are becoming convinced that the discussion needs to be recast in a new light.

Scholar Leo Marx coined the phrase “the machine in the garden” in 1964 to describe the relationship between nature and technology. Considering much of the writing about Arizona’s growth, it seemed an apt title for this volume of Arizona Policy Choices. "The Machine in the Garden" presents growth policy choices for Arizona along a continuum: Yesterday’s Growth—the policies that have been used in the past; Today’s Growth—the “smarter” approaches from around the country; and Tomorrow’s Growth—cutting edge thinking about the economy and experiments in urbanism and governance.

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ContributorsWaits, Mary Jo (Contributor) / Gau, Rebecca (Contributor) / Muro, Mark (Contributor) / Valdecanas, Tina (Contributor) / Rex, Tom R. (Contributor) / Gober, Patricia (Contributor) / Hall, John Stuart (Contributor) / Harrison, Alicia (Contributor) / Hill, Kent (Contributor) / Krutz, Glen (Contributor) / Smith, Scott (Contributor) / Goodwin-White, Jamie (Contributor) / Bower, Leonard G. (Contributor) / Burns, Elizabeth (Contributor) / DeLorenzo, Lisa (Contributor) / Fulton, William (Contributor) / Valenzuela, Laura (Contributor) / Melnick, Rob (Contributor) / Heard, Karen (Contributor) / Welch, Nancy (Contributor) / Schick, Cherylene (Contributor) / Morrison Institute for Public Policy (Publisher)
Created2000-09
Description

Fast Growth in Metropolitan Phoenix is the first product of a comprehensive effort to describe and analyze the region’s growth. The Brookings Institution Center on Urban and Metropolitan Policy in Washington, D.C. presented the opportunity for this project to Morrison Institute for Public Policy. The story of growth in metropolitan

Fast Growth in Metropolitan Phoenix is the first product of a comprehensive effort to describe and analyze the region’s growth. The Brookings Institution Center on Urban and Metropolitan Policy in Washington, D.C. presented the opportunity for this project to Morrison Institute for Public Policy. The story of growth in metropolitan Phoenix is a complicated, often surprising, tale. There is much to be proud of in the region. Yet there is also much to worry about, and much that needs to be done. Hits and Misses will have been successful if it becomes a catalyst for getting started.

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ContributorsWaits, Mary Jo (Author) / Fulton, William (Author) / Morrison Institute for Public Policy (Publisher)
Created2003-03
Description

It’s been more than five decades now since Scottsdale incorporated as a city.During that time, the city emerged as one of the most well-known communities in the Western United States—or, as the local logan says,“The West’s Most Western Town.” From the 1950s onward, Scottsdale combined upscale resorts, an outstanding arts

It’s been more than five decades now since Scottsdale incorporated as a city.During that time, the city emerged as one of the most well-known communities in the Western United States—or, as the local logan says,“The West’s Most Western Town.” From the 1950s onward, Scottsdale combined upscale resorts, an outstanding arts and culture scene, and a spectacular natural setting to create a cachet that few other cities anywhere in the nation could match. So powerful was the Scottsdale name that the city focused on competing nationally with other brand name towns, rather than operating within the context of metropolitan Phoenix.