The Most Magical Place on Earth: Arizona’s Push to Become a Global Leader in Clinical Magic Mushroom Research

The Most Magical Place on Earth: Arizona’s Push to Become a Global Leader in Clinical Magic Mushroom Research

Arizona State Law Journal Blog
By Max Mashal.  H.B. 2486 and the Bipartisan Push for Magic Mushroom Legislation In January 2023, a bill that would allocate up to $30 million for clinical trials using whole psilocybin mushrooms (colloquially called “magic mushrooms”) was proposed in the Arizona legislature. The bill, known as H.B. 2486, was introduced by Republican Representative Kevin Payne and has bipartisan support, with notable backers including Republican Senator T.J. Shope and Democratic Representatives Jennifer Longdon and Stacey Travers. If passed, H.B. 2486 could pave the way for Arizona to become a world leader in groundbreaking psilocybin research. Psilocybin: The Most Pervasive Drug You’ve Never Heard Of Psilocybin is the ingredient that puts the “magic” in “magic mushrooms.” The naturally occurring psychedelic compound is found in over 200 species of mushrooms and has been…
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Rio Verde Scrambles to Keep Its Head Above Water Amidst Southwest Megadrought

Rio Verde Scrambles to Keep Its Head Above Water Amidst Southwest Megadrought

Arizona State Law Journal Blog
By Ian Balitis.  The Arizona Megadrought Ninety percent of the world’s population lives within six and a half miles of a surface freshwater body. This comes as no surprise considering the essential role water plays in human life. Access to drinking water is necessary for human survival. Approximately 98% of electricity production worldwide relies on water. The viability of agricultural food sources is dependent on water. Our reliance on water cannot be understated. Unfortunately, Arizona currently faces its worst drought in 1,200 years. To add insult to injury, the COVID-19 pandemic spurred unprecedented population growth across Maricopa County, exacerbating the harmful effects of the megadrought. Put simply, water is at a premium in Maricopa County and, predictably, conflict has followed. On January 1, 2023, the City of Scottsdale followed through…
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Arizona Now Has a Flat State Income Tax—Will It Serve Arizona Right?

Arizona Now Has a Flat State Income Tax—Will It Serve Arizona Right?

Arizona State Law Journal Blog
By Dallas Fox.  Arizona's Past and Current Income Tax System Long is the debate on whether state income tax should be split into different tax brackets, kept at a single flat rate, or eliminated entirely. Prior to former Arizona Governor Doug Ducey signing Senate Bill 1828 into law on June 30, 2021, the Arizona state income tax consisted of four distinct tax brackets. The lowest bracket taxed individuals at 2.59% of income below $27,808 and hit a maximum tax of 4.5% on every dollar beyond $166,844. This progressive tax structure had the effect of taxing Arizonans at an increasingly punitive rate as they earned larger taxable incomes.  Immediately after SB 1828’s passage into law, Arizona’s income taxation shrunk to two brackets only, where all income up to $27,808 was taxed…
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Dragging Out the Inevitable: Arizona’s Proposed Drag Laws and their Constitutional Issues

Dragging Out the Inevitable: Arizona’s Proposed Drag Laws and their Constitutional Issues

Arizona State Law Journal Blog
By Evan Ridley.  Amidst a wave of anti-LGBTQ bills currently being brought around the nation, Arizona now has multiple bills in the State Senate proposing to restrict drag performances. Since January, State Senators have introduced four separate bills looking to criminalize drag and the showing of drag to minors, as well as restrict when and where drag shows may be performed. What is drag? It’s the act of dressing up as a different gender and exaggerating certain attributes or qualities for entertainment. While the term “drag” has been used for over 150 years, the act likely has its roots in theater. Some argue that the modern idea of drag arose from Shakespeare, where male actors had to play female roles. However, the act of men playing women in theatrical performances…
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Climate Change, Federal Paralysis, and the State Attorneys General: The Case for Establishing Climate Preservation Units

2022, Past Issues, Print, Volume 54 (2022) Issue 3 (Fall)
By Dewey Warner.  “Our planet is a lonely speck in the great enveloping cosmic dark. In our obscurity, in all this vastness, there is no hint that help will come from elsewhere to save us from ourselves.” Less than three decades after Carl Sagan penned this warning, the responsibility “to preserve and cherish . . . the only home we’ve ever known” is illuminated in stark and tragic fashion by the effects of a rapidly changing climate. Extreme weather events are more frequent and severe. A mass extinction is underway. Tens of millions face famine. A heightened risk of disease threatens the entire human population. The phrase “climate refugees” has entered the popular lexicon. Full Article.
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The Psychology of Pollution Control

2022, Past Issues, Print, Volume 54 (2022) Issue 3 (Fall)
By Arden Rowell and Kenworthey Bilz. Pollution control is fundamentally affected by how people evaluate the harm of pollution. In many legal contexts, psychological processes contribute to an intuitive undervaluation of the harms of pollution, particularly where those harms are diffuse in space and time, complex in character, and/or accrue to nonhuman stakeholders. Psychological processes that impact people’s perception, understanding, and response to pollution can therefore affect how—and how effectively—pollution is controlled. Understanding those psychological processes can thus pay explanatory and prescriptive dividends, including by informing how pollutants are defined, when pollution is tolerated, and how pollution control instruments operate.Full Article. 
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Advancing Water Security in Colonias

2022, Past Issues, Print, Volume 54 (2022) Issue 3 (Fall)
By Rhett Larson & Dylan Hendel. Colonias are small, generally unincorporated communities of predominantly Hispanic residents located near the U.S./Mexico border that suffer disproportionately from water insecurity associated with inadequate drinking water quality and reliability and flooding risks. Many of the water insecurity challenges facing colonias’ residents stem from inadequacies in water law and environmental law. However, many legal obstacles to achieving water security in colonias stem from seemingly unrelated legal challenges, including voting rights, land title and land use issues, and lack of access to effective legal assistance, particularly in securing support from existing federal programs. Each of the four border states–Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, and California–have dealt with water insecurity challenges facing colonias in a variety of ways. In this article, we explore those challenges facing colonias’ residents in…
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The Litigation Labyrinth: Climate Torts and the Clew of Failure-To-Warn

2022, Past Issues, Print, Volume 54 (2022) Issue 3 (Fall)
By Sean Krieg.   On April 1, 2021, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals told taxpayers to “shoulder[] the burden” of New York City’s climate mitigation expenses without any help from major fossil-fuel producers, marketers, or distributors. The court made this unfortunate assessment while affirming the dismissal of the City’s claims against oil and gas companies responsible for over eleven percent of all industrial methane and carbon pollution since the industrial revolution. The City had sued for financial assistance with the costs of protecting its residents from the impacts of the climate crisis—a crisis these companies played a major role in creating and aggravating. In its complaint, the City emphasized how these particular defendants deliberately obfuscated climate science to promote their products, despite their advanced understanding of the global harms resulting…
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Dislocating The Separation of Powers State ‘Thumb’ on The Biden Sustainability Initiatives & Law

2022, Past Issues, Print, Volume 54 (2022) Issue 3 (Fall)
By Steven Ferrey. The much-lauded advantage of the U.S. federalist legal system of separation of legal powers among separate levels of federal, state, and local government is credited with seeding innovation, experimentation, and diversity as a positive variable in the resilient American legal system. Now, U.S. separation of power within the U.S. system of law poses a legal barrier to addressing climate change or rapidly transitioning to sustainable infrastructure. Inferior levels of state and local government now are placing their legal ‘thumb’ on and are legally blocking implementation of the recently enacted Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (2021 Infrastructure Law) and the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act. This article analyzes elements supporting these legal barriers and relevant precedent. Concerning this most important sustainability legislation in a generation, successful implementation matters for the…
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Liberating Sustainable Development from Its Non-Historical Shackles

2022, Past Issues, Print, Volume 54 (2022) Issue 3 (Fall)
By John C. Dernbach and Scott E. Schang. In his enormously influential writings on the public trust doctrine, Professor Joe Sax argued that its core idea could, and should, be expanded beyond the natural resources to which it had been historically subject. He made that point forcefully in an essay entitled Liberating the Public Trust Doctrine from Its Historical Shackles. “At its heart,” he wrote, “the public trust doctrine is not just a set of rules about tidelands, a restraint on alienation by the government or an historical inquiry into the circumstances of long forgotten grants.” Rather, he said, courts should resolve competing claims of public use and private ownership by examining expectations concerning the use of particular resources. “The central idea of the public trust is preventing the destabilizing disappointment of…
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