march 4, 2016 (tucson) february 20th program: protecting...
Post on 07-Mar-2018
214 Views
Preview:
TRANSCRIPT
WWW.LWVGT.ORG 1
More information about CAA and CASA is available online.
Open to the public, the pro-
gram on Saturday, February 20, 2016, will begin at 10:00
am on the lower level of Joel D. Valdez Main Library,
101 N. Stone Avenue. There will be a half-hour
meet-and-greet period be-ginning at 9:30 am.
Please bring a friend and join us. “If we don't stand up
for children, then we
don't stand for
much.” Marian
Wright Edelman
Lori Parker,
Social Policy Chair
Approximately 3,400 children are in foster care in Pima Coun-
ty. Our February 20th program will explore the services availa-
ble to these youth and help us assess how well their needs are
being met.
Our first speaker, Michelle Crow, is Southern Arizona's
Director of Children's Action Alliance (CAA). The CAA is a
non-profit organization. It acts as an independent voice for
Arizona children at the state capital and in the community,
promoting the well-being of Arizona's children through ad-
vocacy, education, and re-search. One of its programs,
Fostering Advocates Arizona (FAAZ), helps young adults
leaving foster care (“aging out”) to transition successfully to
adulthood.
Also on our panel is Krissa Eric-son, Program Supervisor of the
Court Appointed Special Advo-cates (CASA). CASA operates
within the Dependent Chil-dren's Services Division of the
Arizona Supreme Court Admin-istrative Office of the
Courts. Its function is to re-cruit, train, and support volun-
teers to represent the best interests of abused and neglect-
ed children in the courtroom and other settings.
In addition to these two child
welfare professionals, partici-pants from each of the two
programs, FAAZ and CASA, will share their experiences with us.
February 20th Program: Protecting Our Children--
How Are We Doing?
JTED Field Trip: Tuesday, February 16th - 10:00a.m.- 12p.m.
Beverly Kloehn, Development Committee
Member
JTED -- Joint Technical Educa-tion District -- is the focus of
LWVGT’s 3rd annual Issues & Eggs breakfast forum, “What is
JTED’s Link to Arizona’s Econo-my?” League members can learn
about JTED in advance by tour-ing several JTED classes at
Sunnyside High School.
We hope to visit 3-4 JTED pro-grams, including the Bio-
Technology program. Other programs which may be on the
tour include Emergency Medical
Services, Automotive Tech, Digital Photography, and/or Law
& Public Safety.
Space is limited to the first 15 members to call the League
Office (520-327-7652) to con-firm their participation. Sunny-
side High School is at 1725 E. Bilby Rd, Tucson. Members can
sign up to carpool from the LWVGT office when making
their reservation. If you make a reservation, please call the office
immediately should your plans change.
Program and registration infor-
mation for our Friday, March 4th Issues & Eggs breakfast is
online.
What does JTED
look like on the
ground?
Volume 69 No. 5 February 2016
Save the Date:
Issues & Eggs
March 4, 2016 (Tucson)
Annual Meeting April 15, 2016 (Tucson)
LWVAZ ‘16 Council April 30– May 1, 2016
(Phoenix)
LWVUS ‘16 Convention June 16-19, 2016 (D.C.)
Inside this issue:
February Program 1
JTED Field Trip 1
Calendar 2
52nd AZ Legislature
Opens 2
President’s Message 3
Money In Politics
Consensus Summary 3
November 2015 Bond
Election Results 3
Running & Winning 2016 4
Contributions to the
League’s Education 4
Letter from
Leadership 5
Mark your calendars:
Election Dates in 2016 5
Calling all LWVGT
Readers 6
December 12th
Holiday Brunch 6
50-Year Member
Profile: Gini McGirr 7
Thought about AA
History Month 7
2016 Leaguer of the
Year: Who shall it be? 8
Member Support for
LWVGT 8
WWW.LWVGT.ORG 2
Page 2
Updated online. All meetings are open to members and the public unless otherwise indicated.
Calendar
Social Policy Chair Lori
Parker and Membership
Co-Chair Freda Johnson
Members Gini McGirr and
Phylis Carnahan with Communications Chair
Roxanne Housley and De-velopment Chair Carol
West
Speakers (left to right): for-
mer legislator Pete Hersh-
berger (R), lobbyist Michael
Racy and former legislator
Paula Aboud (D)
52nd AZ Legislature Opens
Gini McGirr,
LWVGT Member
The 52nd Legislative session opened on January 11th with
Governor Ducey giving his State of the State speech.
On January 14, there were 250
bills filed in the House and 150
in the Senate. There were also
some bills that might be headed to the ballot box:
HCR2009 Changing number of
members to the Independ-ent Redistricting Commis-
sion; HCR2006 marriage to be of one
man and one woman;
HCR2013 to repeal Clean Elec-
tions; and SCR1001 for the Equal Rights
Amendment.
Be on the lookout for Action Alerts sent out by the state lob-
byists and do contact your legisla-tors when asked to do so.
January 16, 2015
Program
The Real Story: How a
Bill Becomes a Law
Date Time Location and Description
Tuesday, February 2, 2016
9:30 AM
Eastside Unit Meeting. 9:30 a.m. social, 10:00 a.m.program, Ward 2 Office, 7575 E. Speedway. Topic: Some Positive Programs for Foster Chil-dren. Speakers: Debbie Mack from Children's Village; Marion Pickens, CASA (Court Appointed Special Advocate) volunteer. Questions: Phylis Carnahan 885-3271
Friday, February 5, 2016
9:30-11:30am LWVGT Board Meeting. Meet at Aviva Children's Services, 153 S. Plumer
Friday, Feb 12, 2016
12PM Green Valley Unit Meeting. Program TBA. Madera Room, 3rd floor of LaVista Building, La Pasada. Bring sack lunch. Contact: Sue Girardeau, 648-7969
Tuesday, February 16, 2016
2-4pm
Northwest & Saddlebrooke Units Combined Meeting. Mountain Vista Fire District Station 610, 1175 W Magee Rd, Tucson, AZ 85704. Topic: Crime, Homelessness and other issues of concern on the Northwest Side. Speak-er: Sgt. Erin Gibson from the Pima County Sheriff's Office. Contact: Win-ifred Williams, 742-0502.
Thursday, February 18, 2016
11:30-1pm
Midtown Unit Meeting. We will feature guest Margaret Regan, author of "Detained and Deported" and Tucson Weekly writer. We meet at the home of Rosemary and Wendell Niemann. Contact Janice Murphy at 323-7501.
Saturday, February 20, 2016
9:30-Noon
Protecting Our Children - How Are We Doing?. Monthly Program Meeting, 9:30 am meet and greet, 10 am program. Tucson Main Library. Speakers: Michelle Crow, Southern Arizona Director, Children's Action Alliance; Krissa Ericson, Supervisor, Court Appointed Special Advocates (CASA)
Monday, February 22, 2016
Presidential Preference Election Registration Deadline. Deadline for regis-tering with a political party in order to vote in the Presidential Preference election. This is important for those who are registered as independents and no-party voters, but wish to vote in the Presidential Primary.
Friday, March 4, 2016
7:30am
Issues and Eggs. The public is invited to attend the LWVGT's third annual Issues and Eggs breakfast at the Doubletree by Hilton Hotel, 445 S. Al-vernon Way. Topic: What is JTED's (Joint Technical Education District) Link to Arizona's Economy? (details)
Friday, March 11, 2016
9:30-11:30am LWVGT Board Meeting. Meet at Aviva Children's Services, 153 S. Plumer
Thursday, March 17, 2016
11:30-1pm
Midtown Unit Meeting. Focus on 5/17/16 Education Funding State Ballot Proposition 123. We meet at the home of Rosemary and Wendell Nie-mann. Contact Janice Murphy (520) 323-7501 or Freda Johnson (520) 622-1933.
WWW.LWVGT.ORG 3
Judy Moll, President
As a local League president, I serve on the board of the
League of Women Voters of Arizona (LWVAZ). It meets
five times a year, usually at the Phoenix state office. Led by
LWVAZ President Shirley San-delands, our November meet-
ing accomplished a great deal. Here’s a sampling of top-
ics discussed:
Education: LWVAZ educa-
tion funding committee mem-ber Nancy Pfafflin prepared
action messages on our web-site for members to use with
legislators or the governor.
Voter Guide: LWVAZ Vot-er Service Chair Anna Dolak
and Shirley plan to raise $20,000 to print 100,000 issues
of the Voter Guide for the fall election. While in past years
Voter Guide distribution was limited to areas with Leagues,
Joan Kaltsas is working to es-tablish distribution sites
throughout the state. Please respond to the LWVAZ re-
quest for donations to the Education Fund to underwrite
printing of these Guides.
Candidate Forums: Bob
Richardson has approached
candidates from the Republican and Democratic parties to
obtain commitments to partici-pate in US Senate candidate
forums in 2016. If there is need for a primary forum, it will be
held here at PCC West in Au-gust. Bob also has commit-
ments from several TV stations (KOLD in Tucson) to broad-
cast these forums live.
More information about the
November 21, 2015 LWVAZ
meeting is available online.
President’s Message: State League November 2015 Meeting
Money In Politics Consensus Summary
Page 3 February 2016
Judy Moll
LWVGT President 2014-2016
Nancy Pfafflin,
Program Chair
During our local unit consen-
sus meetings following the Money in Politics (MIP) study,
LWVGT members agreed on several goals and purposes for
campaign finance regulation. Members also agreed that sev-
eral explicit activities connect-ing donations and legislative
work constitute political cor-
ruption.
Our members favor some spending limits on all individuals
and most organizations, as well
as restrictions on donations
and bundling by lobbyists. We also favor abolishing SuperPacs
and spending coordinated or directed by candidates, other
than a candidate's own cam-
paign committee.
We support:
public funding of campaigns, either voluntary or man-
datory, with reasonable
spending limits; improvements to campaign
finance administration and enforcement, including
adding independent or nonpartisan members to
the Federal Election Com-
mission; and
having an uneven number of commissioners to prevent
deadlock.
Our MIP consensus report will
be combined with those of
local Leagues throughout the
U.S., resulting in a new position
statement on which the League
will base action.
“Politics
has become
so
expensive
that it takes
a lot of
money even
to be
defeated.”
Will Rogers
November 2015 Bond Election Results
In the election held last No-
vember, Pima County voters rejected all seven County bond
propositions. Overall voter turnout approached 40%, high-
er than in 2013, the previous off-year election. Nearly 83%
of voters used early ballots.
A report submitted by Pima County Administrator Chuck
Huckelberry to the Board of Supervisors analyzes data relat-
ing to overall voter turnout
and rate of early voting, as well as how voters voted on the
propositions at the precinct level and within larger geo-
graphic areas. Census tract level demographic data and
registered voter political affilia-tions were compared to prop-
osition approval rates in an
effort to identify trends.
The County Administrator
does not determine the rea-
sons for the election results.
Even so, the report makes
interesting reading and can be
accessed online.
What can
we learn
from last
year’s bond
election?
WWW.LWVGT.ORG 4
Roxie Lopez and Mary Gresham, Running and
Winning Co-Chairs
For the last 13 years, LWVGT has focused on young women
in high schools throughout Pima County with the Running
and Winning Program (R & W). This one-day workshop pro-
vides an opportunity for high school students to meet and
interview local women who are elected officials or who have
run for public office. The stu-
dents then practice their own mock run for office by forming
a campaign team, identifying an issue, creating a platform and
slogan, and having candidates deliver a speech.
Preparations are underway for
the 2016 Annual Running and Winning Workshop this fall.
Co-sponsors include the Amer-ican Association of University
Women, the Pima County / Tucson Women's Commission,
graduate women from the Uni-
versity of Arizona's School of Government and Public Policy,
and the YWCA of Tucson.
The R & W committee invites you to support and participate
in this program so that togeth-er we help develop future
women leaders. For more information please contact
Roxie Lopez and Mary Gresh-am at RunningAndWin-
ning@LWVGT.org.
Running and Winning 2016
Contributions to the League’s Education Fund
deductible, because this fund
operates under Section 501(c)(4) and they are held by our
local League.
To contribute to the Greater Tucson League’s Education
Fund:
Make your check payable to: League of Women
Voters of Arizona Educa-tion Fund, (LWVAZ-EF is
acceptable).
Write LWVGT, (or just Tucson), in the memo
line. That will insure your donation stays in our local
League’s Education Fund.
If you have any questions,
please contact me or Patsy
Frannea.
David Horr, LWVGT
Treasurer
The League of Women Voters of Greater Tucson (LWVGT)
always welcomes donations to their Education Fund. As you
probably know, Ed Fund dona-tions ARE tax-deductible under
Section 501(c)(3) of the Federal Tax Code. These funds are
held for us by the LWV Arizo-na. Donations to the League’s
operating fund (which includes member dues) are NOT tax-
Page 4
LWVGT Once Again Has an Observer Corps
Libby Whitthorne,
Observer Corp Chair
Thanks to the leadership and initiative of the League of Wom-
en Voters of Greater Tucson's President, Judy Moll, our local
League is once again supporting an Observer Corps. Members
of the Corps are providing ob-servations of the Pima County
Board of Supervisors, Tucson City Council, Oro Valley City
Council, Tucson Unified School District Board, and Amphithea-
ter School District Board. We hope to recruit League mem-
bers to observe Sahuarita and
Marana City Councils, other
local school boards, and select-ed public school Site Councils.
“Observer corps” or monitor-
ing programs are not new. They have provided local
Leagues around the country “a very effective way to protect
and strengthen the citizen’s right to know.” To learn more
about local League observer corps, you can access LWVUS
publication, Observing Your Government in Action online.
If you have an interest in joining
the LWVGT Corps, please con-
tact League President Judy Moll
or Observer Corps Chair Libby Whitthorne for more infor-
mation.
2016 Co-chair Roxie
Lopez (right) with Carol West at the
2015 R & W
Workshop
About LWVGT’s
Education Fund
Protecting our
right to know is
integral to the
health of our
democracy.
WWW.LWVGT.ORG 5
Marilyn Smoler, Voter Ser-
vice Chair
The Voter Service Committee works to register and educate
voters, and to get out the vote. Traditional activities include
participating in National Voter Registration Day, registering
voters at schools and assisted living facilities, holding forums,
and preparing and distributing citizen and voting–related pub-
lications. The Committee also conducts elections for organi-
zations such as home owner
associations (HOAs).
Among Voter Service projects planned for this year are devel-
oping ways to build new rela-tionships, or deepen existing
relationships, with local and state election officials, helping
homeless voters, training LWVGT members to register
voters, planning forums, work-ing on ways to increase voting
rates and improving relation-ships with local public schools.
Since a primary goal of the League is to foster informed
and active participation in gov-ernment, we consider all
LWVGT members to be part of the Voter Service team.
Monthly meetings are on the
second Tuesday from 2:00-4:00 pm at Woods Library, 3455 N
1st Ave, Tucson. All LWVGT members are welcome to par-
ticipate.
Letter from the Leadership
Mark your calendars: Election Dates in 2016
Page 5
“The ballot
is the
only
safety.”
Frederick
Douglass
February 22, 2016 Voter registration deadline for Presidential Preference Election
February 24, 2016 Early Voting begins for Presidential Preference Election
March 3, 2016 Last day to file General Election - New Party Petitions
March 22, 2016 Presidential Preference Election
April 18, 2016 Last day to register for the [May 17] Special Election
April 20, 2016 Early Voting begins for Special Election
May 2, 2016 First day to file candidate nomination petitions
May 17, 2016 Special Election [Proposition 123]
June 1, 2016 Last day to file candidate nomination petitions
July 7, 2016 Last day to file constitution & initiative petitions
July 13, 2016 Last day to file arguments for or against ballot measures (General Election)
July 21, 2016 Last day to file as a write-in candidate for the Primary Election
August 1, 2016 Voter registration deadline for Primary Election
August 3, 2016 Early Voting begins for Primary Election
August 30, 2016 Primary Election
September 29, 2016 Last day to file as a write-in candidate for the General Election
October 10, 2016 Voter registration deadline for General Election
October 12, 2016 Early Voting begins for General Election
November 8, 2016 General Election
Congratulations to our President Judy Moll, who is a finalist for the 2016 Women of Influence Award for
Community Service. More information online.
Congratulations Judy Moll
Arizona Secretary of State Elections Calendar is online.
WWW.LWVGT.ORG 6
Mary Gresham, LWVGT
Book Club Coordinator
The LWVGT Book Club is one
of LWVGT’s best-kept secrets. It began nearly 5 years ago with
Ruth Beeker as its first coordi-nator when the then-LWVAZ
president Barbara Klein sug-gested that each Arizona
League form a book club and read the same books.
But LWVGT’s free-spirited
readers soon took off on their own. Book choices varied.
Among the most liked were
The Lemon Tree about a Pal-
estinian family and its former home in Israel and Boom Bust
Boom about the copper indus-try.
Five books are chosen by book
club members each year at their November meeting.
Meetings are held at Ward 6 City Council office, 3202 E. 1st
St.
The group’s next meeting is on Wednesday, March 16, when
they will discuss In the Garden of Beasts; Love, Terror and
an American Family in Hit-
ler's Berlin by Erik Larson. LWVGT members who have
read the book are welcome.
The list of books for this year
and more information about
the book club are available
online. Members may contact
Mary Gresham at
BookClub@lwvgt.org with any
questions.
Calling all LWVGT Readers
December 12th Holiday Brunch
Thanks to our own Ms.
Claus, aka Carol West, our hostess with the mostest,
Phylis Carnahan, and all the helpers who provided food
and drink for a festive cele-bration. It may have been
stormy outside, but inside it was warm and full of good
cheer.
Page 6
No entertainment
is so cheap as reading, nor any
pleasure so lasting.”
Mary Wortley Montagu
Photos taken by Ann Eve Cunningham
WWW.LWVGT.ORG 7
Libby Whitthorne,
LWVGT member
In March 1965, Gini McGirr had just moved with her hus-
band to Worthington, Minne-sota from South Dakota. At
home with a new baby, Gini looked for a place where she
could volunteer. In South Da-kota she had been a member of
a business women’s sorority, but there was no business
women’s sorority in Worthing-ton. A friend invited her to a
League meeting. She joined, and the rest is League history.
Over the years, Gini and her family were transferred multi-
ple times. Each time Gini joined
the League, serving on local Chapter Boards and on State
Boards in Colorado, Arizona, and Nebraska. She enjoys all
League activities and feels like the organization has been a
kind of “family” in each of her new homes.
League experiences which she has particularly enjoyed in-
clude:
serving as Legislative Chair for the Arizona State
League, which involved reviewing legislative bills
to identify ones on which the League has a position
and alerting League mem-
bers to contact their legis-lators; and
preparing the Arizona State League’s “Voters’
Guide,” which explains ballot propositions and
provides pro and con statements.
Gini feels the League’s role
providing education to the public is critically important to
the communities the League
serves.
Thank you, Gini, for your fifty
years of service in the League!
50-Year Member Profile: Gini McGirr
Thoughts for African American History Month
A state law mandated that
“meetings [of social organiza-tions] including membership of
both races” have segregated seating and separate sanitary
facilities. Another law required organizations to file a member-
ship list with the Louisiana Secretary of State. And, under
a third law, teachers advocating integration in the public
schools, or holding member-ship in an organization advocat-
ing racial integration, were subject to dismissal and loss of
tenure. The combined effect of the latter two laws put both
African American and white LWVNO members employed
by the local public school sys-tem at risk of losing their jobs
if LWVNO filed a membership list that included the new mem-
bers.
This risk, along with a signifi-
cant drop in membership over the preceding year, led to the
meeting of the new African American LWVNO members
and designated Board members before the deadline for filing
the member roster. Describing
that meeting, Frystak writes:
Ultimately, three board
members and the LWVNO president met with the six
black members and asked them to resign. One mem-
ber recalled that the situa-tion was “very embarrass-
ing, but the black members tendered their resignations
‘graciously’ as they did not want to “imperil their
jobs.’” [Citation omitted.]
LWVNO characterized its
reversal of the policy of inte-grated membership as tempo-
rary. Reintegration occurred in
1963.
Today, nearly 60 years after
that meeting, let us honor the New Orleans 6. They shared
the values of the League and acted on their values despite a
hostile, potentially physically dangerous, environment. They
worked with others and reas-sessed their position, even
though it meant undoing their previous action. In sum, they
Paula Wilk, 2015-16 Voter
Editor
In mid 1956, the League of Women Voters of New Orle-
ans (LWVNO) enrolled its first African American members.
Later that same year, these six women were asked to meet
with the LWVNO president and three board members. In
Our Minds on Freedom: Wom-en and the Struggle for Black
Equality in Louisiana, Shannon Lee Frystak outlines the cir-
cumstances that led to that
meeting.
Since 1953, LWVNO leader-ship had been working to inte-
grate their League. The popu-lation of New Orleans was 46%
“colored,” and a League bylaw made membership “open to all
women of voting age.” Yet fear of loss of organizational effec-
tiveness, dissension and racism, as well as the states’ rights
response to the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision,
delayed and disrupted the inte-
gration process.
The New
Orleans 6
Page 7 February 2016
Gini McGirr
(from 2015 LWVAZ
Convention)
exhibited a rare combina-
tion of courage and judg-ment in highly polarized
times, an example to re-
member and learn from.
WWW.LWVGT.ORG 8
2424 E. Broadway
Suite 110 Tucson, AZ 85719
LEAGUE OF WOMEN
VOTERS OF
GREATER TUCSON
Each year our League recog-
nizes an individual from our membership whose contribu-
tions to the League clearly go "above and beyond." In the
August 2008 Voter, then LWVGT Secretary and a 2007
Leaguer of the Year Judith Fischer noted that:
The custom of honoring,
at our annual meetings, members who have filled
special needs during the concluding year began
early in our organization's history. Throughout our
sixty years, individuals' contributions have been
recognized and sincerely thanked.
LWVGT records reflect that
the naming of Leaguer of the Year began in 1987. The
LWVGT.ORG
President - Judy Moll
1st. VP (Membership)- Freda Johnson & Pat
Wiedhopf 2nd. VP (Program)- Nancy
Pfafflin 3rd. VP (Voter Service)-
Marilyn Smoler Secretary- Dorothy Riley
Treasurer- David Horr Money in Politics Study-
Janice Murphy Education Finance Study-
Jen Darland Communications- Roxanne
Housley Social Policy- Lori Parker
Voter Editor- Paula Wilk
CONTACT US
Contributors to this issue:
Ann-Eve Cunningham, Sue DeArmond, Betty Bengtson,
Judith Fischer, Joe Fran-nea, Mary Gresham,
Roxanne Housley, David Horr, Freda Johnson, Joan
Kaltsas, Beverly Kloehn, Jen-nifer Lohse, Roxie Lopez,
Gini McGirr, Janice Murphy, Judy Moll, Lori Parker, Nancy
Pfafflin, Marilyn Smoler, Carol
West and Libby Whitthorne
Voter Advisory Board: Sally Davenport, Grace Evans,
Betty Geehan, Gini McGirr
and Libby Whitthorne
At our December 12th Holiday Brunch, spirits were high and good will was in the air. Unfortu-
nately not all members could make it, but the season’s generosity was not limited to a single day. Member support for LWVGT and its activities was apparent before, during and after the brunch.
Here’s the report from LWVGT Treasurer David Horr of total member donations from Decem-ber 1, 2015 through January 11, 2016:
OPERATING FUND $1,675.00
EDUCATION FUND 1,235.70 ENDOWMENT FUND 4,400.00
TOTAL DONATIONS $7,310.70
As we all know, the work of the League depends on both financial grants and donations and the activities of volunteers. Our mem-
bers contribute in both ways, and they are at the heart of our successes.
Member Support for LWVGT
2016 Leaguer of the Year: Who should it be?
MEMBER Alert Regarding Directory
The LWVGT Membership Directory on our Members Only website (lwvgt.org) is updated monthly
with corrections and new information. If you do not have the password for the Directory, please call
the League office at 520-327-7652.
award has been given to one
or more board and non-board members in recognition of
outstanding accomplishments deemed vital to the success of
various goals and purposes of the League of Women Voters
of Greater Tucson.
Recipients during the award’s first decade include three cur-
rent LWVGT members, Freda Johnson, Betsy Zukoski and
Betty Geehan. Betsy Zukoski was recognized a second time
in 2006 and is our only double honoree.
At this year's annual meeting,
we will name another out-standing Leaguer of the Year.
You can help 2014 Leaguer of the Year Roxanne Housley as
she begins the selection pro-cess. Please forward the name
or names of members whose
contributions deserve recogni-tion, together with the rationale
for your choice, to Roxanne Housley.
Twice Leaguer
of the Year Betsy Zukoski
Thank you
Member
Donors!
LWVGT Mission Statement
Our Mission and Roles
The League of Women Voters is a nonpartisan political organization encouraging informed and active
participation in government. It influences public policy through education and advocacy. We never sup-
port or oppose any political party or candidate.
Phone: 520-327-7652
E-mail: League@lwvgt.org
top related