Contact

Arizona Government Authority serves as a structured reference resource covering the full scope of Arizona's state, county, municipal, and tribal government landscape. The contact infrastructure below is maintained for inquiries related to content accuracy, research scope, professional submissions, and general correspondence regarding the reference material published across this property. Response timelines and message requirements vary by inquiry category.

Service area covered

Arizona Government Authority covers government structures, regulatory agencies, legislative bodies, judicial institutions, and administrative processes operating within Arizona's jurisdictional boundaries. The reference scope spans all 15 Arizona counties — from Apache County in the northeast to Yuma County in the southwest — as well as the state's 91 incorporated municipalities, federally recognized tribal governments, special districts, and councils of governments.

Content domains covered across this property include:

  1. State constitutional offices — the Governor's Office, Secretary of State, Attorney General, State Treasurer, Superintendent of Public Instruction, State Mine Inspector, and Corporation Commission
  2. Legislative structure — the Arizona State Legislature, including the 30-member Senate and 60-member House of Representatives, legislative districts, and the initiative and referendum process
  3. Judicial framework — the Arizona Supreme Court, Court of Appeals, and Superior Court system
  4. Executive departments — including the Arizona Department of Transportation, Department of Health Services, Department of Revenue, Department of Water Resources, and approximately 20 additional cabinet-level agencies
  5. Local and regional governance — county government structures, municipal government frameworks, councils of governments including the Maricopa Association of Governments and Pima Association of Governments
  6. Regulatory and procedural reference — the Arizona Administrative Code, Arizona Revised Statutes, public records law, open meeting law, and procurement standards

Inquiries falling outside Arizona's governmental jurisdiction — including federal agencies, out-of-state regulatory matters, or private-sector legal questions — are outside the scope of this reference property.

What to include in your message

Effective correspondence requires specific information to route and process correctly. The following breakdown identifies what to include based on inquiry type.

Content accuracy or correction requests:
- The exact page title and URL where the issue appears
- The specific factual claim, figure, citation, or structural statement in question
- A named public source (statute number, agency publication, court record, or government document) supporting the proposed correction
- The nature of the discrepancy — factual error, outdated information, or missing material

Research or professional inquiries:
- The specific government domain or agency within Arizona's structure relevant to the inquiry
- Whether the inquiry concerns a specific statute (cite the Arizona Revised Statutes title and section where applicable), regulatory code, or administrative process
- A clear description of the reference need — this property does not provide legal advice, case-specific guidance, or agency navigation services

Editorial or submission inquiries:
- The proposed subject area, mapped against existing content categories on this property
- Any institutional affiliation and the nature of the professional or research relationship to Arizona government topics
- A summary of the informational scope and any primary sources the submission would draw upon

Correspondence lacking specific page references, statute citations, or source documentation will receive lower routing priority. Messages that conflate this reference property with an official government agency will be redirected to the appropriate Arizona agency contact pages.

Response expectations

Response timelines differ based on inquiry category and completeness of the submission.

Inquiry Type Expected Response Window
Content accuracy — documented, sourced 5–7 business days
Content accuracy — undocumented claim 10–14 business days (source verification required)
Research or professional reference inquiry 7–10 business days
Editorial or submission inquiry 10–15 business days
General correspondence 14–21 business days

This property is a reference archive, not an interactive service desk. Responses to general correspondence are not guaranteed. Responses to sourced accuracy corrections are prioritized because they directly affect the integrity of published reference material.

Arizona Government Authority does not field citizen service requests on behalf of any Arizona state agency, county, or municipality. Individuals seeking assistance with government services — benefits, licensing, permits, court processes, or elections — must contact the relevant agency directly. The Arizona Department of Economic Security, Arizona Department of Transportation, and Arizona Department of Health Services each maintain independent public-facing contact infrastructure.

Additional contact options

For matters that require publicly available official government contacts rather than correspondence with this reference property, the following categories apply.

Arizona state government primary portal: The Arizona.gov portal aggregates agency directories, licensing portals, and public service access points across all executive-branch departments.

Public records requests: Arizona's public records law, codified at Arizona Revised Statutes Title 39, Chapter 1, governs access to government records. Requests must be submitted directly to the custodial agency, not to this reference property. The Arizona public records law reference page on this property outlines statutory requirements and agency obligations.

Legislative inquiries: The Arizona State Legislature maintains a constituent services function through the Arizona State Legislature structure. District-specific contact depends on legislative district assignment, which can be determined through the Arizona legislative districts reference.

Judicial matters: The Arizona Supreme Court, Court of Appeals, and Superior Court system each operate distinct clerk's offices and case management systems. Self-represented party resources are administered at the superior court level across all 15 counties.

Election and voting inquiries: The Arizona Secretary of State administers statewide elections. County recorders handle voter registration at the county level, with individual offices operating in each of Arizona's 15 counties.

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