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Appropriations panel rejects repeal of advisory commission tied to public safety equipment fund
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Summary
The committee voted not to move Senate Bill 15-37, which would rename a ticket fee‑funded equipment account and repeal its longstanding advisory commission; members cited Arizona Police Association opposition and concerns about removing the advisory structure.
The House Appropriations Committee on March 25 declined to advance Senate Bill 15‑37, a measure that would have renamed the Peace Officer Training Equipment Fund as the Public Safety De‑Escalation and Life Safety Fund and repealed the fund's advisory commission.
Mike Williams, who explained the bill for the absent sponsor, said the fund—built from a $4 fee on citations—sits at roughly $10 million and has funded equipment requests from police and fire agencies. "The most that's happened is when the fund was not had enough money, whatever came in last moves to the next year," Williams told the committee.
Several members said they supported the underlying goal of clarifying the fund's name but opposed repealing the advisory commission. One lawmaker cited Arizona Police Association opposition and warned that removing the commission could shift how money is prioritized. The chair recorded the committee vote as 6 yeses, 9 noes and 3 not voting; the measure failed to receive a do‑pass recommendation.
Lawmakers suggested alternatives such as reforming the advisory structure rather than repeal so that the legislature and stakeholders have clear guidance on needs and priorities.
