For the past year, the deputies union has been asking the Pima County Board of Supervisors to follow through on increases in salary, or "step increases," that hundreds of employees were promised years ago.
Deputies, sergeants and corrections officers who were hired during the last nine years are being paid at the same rate as new hires.
Nanos has taken a different route, asking the board for "decompression" - a plan that would adjust deputies' pay to bring them up to the proper level of the department's pay scale.
Negotiations with the board ceased in late March, when County Administrator Chuck Huckelberry said he wouldn't support salary increases for sheriff's employees, as it excludes all other county employees.
Napier said having deputies who have been with the department for nearly a decade being paid the same as newly hired deputies doesn't make sense. This leads to veteran deputies leaving the department for better paying jobs elsewhere.
"I would examine the current budget before going to the taxpayers or board of supervisors, to be sure we've done everything internally we can," Napier said. "The organization might be a little on the top-heavy side, and there may be ways to save money there."
Deputy and sergeant pay has been an issue for years, but Staten said it's only discussed during elections.
"If I'm elected, it will be an ongoing effort, because it's always about supporting the deputies in the field, corrections officers and the civilian staff," Staten said. "If the upper-echelon, and I mean captains and above, were to just go away, the department would still run. If we don't have any sergeants and deputies in the field, we can't function. We have to be able to support them to even exist."