Latest Local News
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Crews plan to extinguish a fire on Saturday night from a freight train derailment near the Arizona-New Mexico state line that forced the closure of a stretch of Interstate 40.
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Arizona Senators Krysten Sinema and Mark Kelly announced over 87 million dollars in funding today for solar projects that benefit tribal homes.
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Senate Republicans have refused to take up a bill allowing the Arizona Governor’s Office of Tribal Relations to continue operating after June.
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Arizona Governor Katie Hobbs and Attorney General Kris Mayes unveiled a website Thursday that they say is a “safe resource” for women seeking reproductive options.
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The indictment names 11 Republicans who submitted a document to Congress falsely declaring that Trump won Arizona in 2020. They're now charged with nine counts each of conspiracy, fraud and forgery.
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A proposed repeal of Arizona’s near-total ban on abortions has won approval from the state House.
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For a third straight week, Democrats at the Arizona Legislature are expected to attempt to repeal the state’s near-total abortion ban.
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For more than 20 years, bird lovers have celebrated the onset of the summer breeding season at the Verde Valley Birding and Nature Festival. This year’s event takes place the last weekend in April and is centered at Dead Horse Ranch State Park.
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The Arizona Department of Forestry and Fire Management continued work on a prescribed burn project near Flagstaff Tuesday.
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State Sen. Wendy Rogers wants her opponent Rep. David Cook disqualified from the upcoming Republican primary to represent portions of northern Arizona. She claims hundreds of signatures submitted by Cook are invalid.
NPR News
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Police took more than 250 protesters into custody in Arizona, Indiana, Massachusetts and Missouri this weekend, as the war in Gaza continues to embroil campuses across the nation.
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Researchers have been able to reverse the effects of a syndrome that affects brain development in a brain organoid. (This story first aired on All Things Considered on April 24, 2024.)
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Historical Markers in the US are fascinating, sometimes wrong, sometimes offensive and cruel. But they also have the power to unlock secrets, like those of a long forgotten Civil Rights cold case.
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NPR's Ayesha Rascoe speaks to a patron of the party, musician George Brown of the band Kool & The Gang, about his new book, new record, and the "Celebration" of a long and funky career.
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NPR's Ayesha Rascoe speaks with scientific director Solomon Birhanie about his efforts to fight mosquitoes in Southern California by releasing sterile male mosquitoes into the population.
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