HomeMy WebLinkAboutHistorical Records - Incorporation (25) THE MAKING OF A TOWN
BY
MARJORIE K. KRIEGH, TOWN HISTORIAN
It is fact that the Town of Oro Valley has been happily incorporated
since April, 1974. But, perhaps, you have wondered how and why the
Town of Oro Valley came to be.
Our story began long ago, way back in 1968. Tucson Mayor 'Gentleman'
Jim Corbett made a statement which, to some area residents, could be
likened to the "shot heard 'round the world". Well, 'round Tucson,
anyway. Mayor Corbett said that they (the areas around Tucson) will be
taken in (to Tucson's City limits) kicking, stamping and screaming, if
necessary' . The City of Tucson's political climate, as it was at that
time, was not to many people's liking and many, many people living
outside Tucson's corporate limits wished to remain so. Some concerned
citizens began to look at the feasibility of forming their own town in
order to avoid being absorbed by the City of Tucson.
The State of Arizona, however, had done its part to discourage
incorporation of areas on the "outskirts" of larger municipalities. A
ruling came down from the legislature which stipulated that an area
proposed for incorporation must have at least 500 inhabitants who all
had to exhibit common goals and objectives. Additionally, to protect
the larger cities, an area proposed for incorporation had to be farther
than six miles from another incorporated city's boundaries. If the
proposed boundaries were not six miles apart, then permission by the
incorporated city must be given. Larger cities and towns lobbied long
and hard for these incorporation rulings because they did not wish to
be hemmed in by a proliferation of "bedroom communities"; to avoid
competition.
Some residents northwest of Tucson were undaunted by these rulings.
With the competent legal advice of Mr. Ellsworth Triplett, for whom I
served as legal secretary at the time, interested people began to
organize. These people came from, not only the area later to become
known as Oro Valley, but also, from the Catalina Foothills area.
There were obstacles to overcome. The "six mile" rule made
incorporation of the Catalina Foothills area impossible, but, as Mr.
Triplett advised, the outlying area which included the Oro Valley
Country Club Estates and the Highlands Mobile Home Park, could
conceivably be incorporated since the area was six miles distant from
the City of Tucson limits. (Later, the Highlands Mobile Home Park was
dropped from the incorporation effort because less than 50% of the
people favored the incorporation. ) At this time, the proposed Town was
to be named, "The Town of Palo Verde".
Because the Oro Valley Country Club Estates, under the direction of
Mr. Robert Daly, President of the Homeowner's Association, was
undertaking a street improvement, interest in the incorporation effort
waned for a time, but was renewed when Mr. E. S. "Steve" Engle, the new
Oro Valley Homeowner's Association President, became interested.
Together with my husband, Jim Kriegh, they gathered citizens from all
areas proposed for incorporation, including Shadow Mountain Estates
East and West, Campo Bello Estates, Linda Vista Citrus Tracts and Oro
Valley Country Club Estates. Citizens from all these areas worked long
and hard for many years, the culmination of their efforts being the
filing of a petition for the incorporation of the Town of Oro Valley
with the Pima County Board of Supervisors. As may have been suspected,
this petition was promptly rejected by the Board, leading to a four
year court battle which ended in the Arizona Supreme Court. The
decision handed down by the Supreme Court directed the Pima County
Board of Supervisors to incorporate our tiny 2.5 square mile Town of
Oro Valley.
This decision signified the birth of the Town of Oro Valley on April
15, 1974 and the beginning of a Town which, it is hoped, all Oro
Valleyans may be proud of today.