By Staff Reporter |
Governor Katie Hobbs vented her frustrations to the media while discussing the latest rejection of another appointment of hers last week.
The day prior, the Arizona Senate voted against Hobbs’ pick, Joan Serviss, to be the director of the Arizona Department of Housing (DOH). In a viral media interview, Hobbs said she had the right to have her appointments confirmed on the basis of her being the governor.
“They’re using her to get this political agenda out that makes no sense. And it holds Arizonans hostage,” said Hobbs. “And if Jake Hoffman, unindicted fake elector Jake Hoffman, wants to decide everyone that gets hired at every state agency, then I welcome him into the governor’s race because that is my job — I get to run state agencies. I won the governor’s race. I get to run state agencies and I get to decide how they’re run and according to the agenda that Arizonans elected me on.”
The subject of Hobbs’ ire, State Senator Jake Hoffman, characterized Hobbs’ remarks as a “full blown temper tantrum.” Hoffman said he wasn’t interested in running for governor, but he did endorse another active candidate, Congressman Andy Biggs.
Serviss blamed partisanship for her rejection, claiming criticisms of her work were “unconscionable and politicized scrutiny.”
“The current political climate at the Legislature, particularly the relentless attacks of public servants like me, creates an environment where, frankly, it’s hard to imagine how qualified individuals stepping up to lead a state agency can endure what amounts to a political circus,” said Serviss in a LinkedIn post. “At the end of the day, whether I hold the Director title or not, I’m still a leader in the fight to end homelessness and address our state’s affordable housing crisis.”
The auditor general also discovered in a sunset review last October that, during Serviss’ first year with ADOH as its cabinet executive officer and executive deputy director, the agency transferred $2 million to scammers posing as an existing nonprofit organization ADOH coordinated with to purchase property for affordable housing. The transfer took place in June 2023 but ADOH didn’t discover the fraud until that December. ADOH also failed to notify the auditor general in the time frame required by statute, and then took nearly 80 days to respond to requests for information from the Arizona Department of Administration. The state covered the $2 million loss with its self-insurance (other state funds).
The auditor general also determined in its summary ADOH “lacks a comprehensive process to evaluate program performance” for the over $1 billion it oversees in housing funds, therefore “limiting its ability to ensure and demonstrate its programs are effectively addressing the state’s housing problems[.]”
The Senate previously found Serviss unfit to lead ADOH, but for different reasons. In September 2023, the Senate rejected Serviss based on her alleged plagiarism perpetrated while leading the Arizona Housing Coalition.
Serviss had served in the role of ADOH director since last September. She now serves as deputy director.
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