to personally thank them. the same heroes are about to lose their job by the end of the year thanks to the president s own vaccine mandate. the president has a body week ahead, he and the first lady will be in puerto rico amidfallout of hurricane fiona, which hit two weeks ago and left behind a lot of damage. 100,000 people without power this morning. the president vowed to give puerto rico what they need. we owe puerto rico a hell of a lot more than they have gotten, we cannot tire, whatever it takes, i mean it, whatever it takes. the president will be back in did sheing c tonight and off to florida on wednesday to meet with officials oversees damage from hurricane ian. among those he spoke with technician second class zach loze, who is about to beic canned out of the guard over refusal to comply with the covid-19 mandate. reporters are asking kamala harris to clarify remarks she made when she suggested hurricane relief should be handed out based on witty. it appears s
people are getting room and board on a cruise ship while they are toiling away day in and day out throughout america trying to survive? they should be outraged. i m outraged, me and my wife had to cancel our cruise because of inflation the way it is, we couldn t afford it. todd: bizarre world and doesn t look to be getting better. the democrat running for da wanting to protect illegal migrants from deportation and slash the phoenix police department budget. listen to her platform. there are ways to make immigration neutral as possible, justice should be individualized determination, driven by all of the issues that are happening in someone s life up to and including immigration status. todd: okay, mayor, boil this
Phoenix looks to add $3.7M to Phoenix police budget, dozens flood public comment line in opposition
Proposal calls for additional $3.7 million; some community members concerned.
and last updated 2021-03-17 01:40:58-04
City officials presented it s trial budget for the 2021-2022 fiscal year to members of the Phoenix City Council Tuesday. The proposed budget would allocate an additional 3.7 million dollars to Phoenix police to fill empty civilian positions, increase wages and invest in police reform, according to Assistant City Manager Jeff Barton.
While no official vote on the city s budget will happen until June, community members and activists flooded the discussion portion of the policy meeting with calls expressing outrage at the proposal.