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The Pima County Board of Supervisors is responsible for steering public policy in the region. The five-member board provides direction to the County Administrator, Jan Lesher, [20] and the county's various departments as they work to ensure safe communities, nurture economic development, sustainably manage natural resources and protect public ...
In 2016, she retired from the Pima County, Arizona government as a housing program manager of the community development and neighborhood conservation. [2] In 2020, she joined the Pima County Board of Supervisors after the death of Richard Elias. [2] A Democrat, she was appointed to the Arizona House of Representatives to succeed Andrés Cano in ...
The name "Board of Supervisors" was changed to "Board of Commissioners" in 1970 to avoid confusion with township government (where the term "Supervisor" was still used). In New York, the new boards were called "county legislatures" (and their members, "county legislators"), but not every county has adopted this system.
"Adopted as the official map of Pima County by resolution of Board of Supervisors, July 22, 1893." Includes illus., "Map of the city of Tucson with additions, 1893," and inset of "Town of Nogales." LC Land ownership maps, 6 Available also through the Library of Congress Web site as a raster image.
A petition to incorporate began circulation in Oro Valley in 1968. The Pima County Board of Supervisors officially refused to allow Oro Valley to incorporate, and litigation followed. Ultimately, the Arizona Supreme Court ruled in favor of incorporation, and in 1974 the Town of Oro Valley was incorporated with only 2.4 square miles (6.2 km 2 ...
In 1918, Collins was on the Tucson Board of Freeholders, and was one of the men responsible for drafting the city's charter that year. [2] [3] In 1922, Collins was elected to the Pima County Board of Supervisors. [4] He ran for re-election in 1924, defeating Danie Burke in the Democrat primary.
In 1979 Corbett was elected clerk of the Pima County Superior Court, a position he held for twenty years. [1] Jim Corbett was born in Los Angeles, California to a Tucson pioneering family. His grandfather, W. J. Corbett, opened the first hardware store in Arizona Territory in 1878. His great-uncle J. Knox Corbett was mayor of Tucson from 1914 ...
Arizona's 20th legislative district is one of 30 in the state, consisting of a section of Pima County. As of 2023, there are 56 precincts in the district, all in Pima, with a total registered voter population of 125,451. [1] The district has an overall population of 238,486. [2]