Rainy Day or Taxpayer Idle Cash? Rethinking Arizona's Budget Reserves copertina

Rainy Day or Taxpayer Idle Cash? Rethinking Arizona's Budget Reserves

Rainy Day or Taxpayer Idle Cash? Rethinking Arizona's Budget Reserves

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In this episode of Birdman at the Arizona Legislature, Birdman steps away from the Capitol and into the studio to unpack a debate that surfaced during caucus: Arizona's Rainy Day Fund — and whether it should even exist.

The discussion began around stabilizing funding for the Department of Public Safety (DPS). A proposal was floated to use interest earnings from the state's $1.5 billion Rainy Day Fund to support DPS operations. But that quickly sparked a bigger philosophical question raised by Representative Neal Carter - District 15

Why does the state need a Rainy Day Fund at all?

Birdman breaks down the numbers:

  • $1.5 billion sitting in reserve

  • What 1% interest generates annually

  • How many Arizona taxpayers actually pay income tax

  • What that reserve represents per taxpayer

The episode explores broader questions:

  • Should the government operate like a business?

  • Is holding large reserves responsible fiscal policy — or idle taxpayer capital?

  • If a Rainy Day Fund exists, what qualifies as a "rainy day"?

  • Should disaster relief, DPS funding, or economic downturns trigger its use?

This isn't framed as a partisan debate — but as a taxpayer's perspective on government budgeting, reserves, and accountability.

If you care about Arizona's budget, fiscal philosophy, tax policy, or government reserves, this episode dives into the numbers and the bigger question:

Should the government save money — or spend only what it collects each year?

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