Latest Local News
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Two environmental groups worry that as drought causes Lake Powell's levels to drop infrastructure at Glen Canyon Dam could threaten water deliveries downstream.
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The move, by the Colorado River Indian Tribes in Arizona and California would give rights of nature to the water, marking a historic first.
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Several Flagstaff residents have demanded the city end a program that uses automated cameras to collect vehicle data from cars.
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Grand Canyon National Park officials have reopened sections of the South Kaibab, Bright Angel and Tonto trails that were closed after the Dragon Bravo Fire exploded in size last month.
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The Four Corners potato fed people 10,000 years ago and now the ancient, nutrient-packed spud is drawing new interest.
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The Sedona City Council has paused a program that uses automated cameras to collect the license plate numbers and vehicle data from cars in the city.
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Officials with the Arizona Department of Emergency and Military Affairs say a wildfire that started last week at Camp Navajo west of Flagstaff is burning in an area that contains "conventional unexploded ordnance."
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Attorney General Kris Mayes says tens of thousands of Arizona voters who never provided proof of citizenship cannot be kicked off the registration rolls.
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The last dance? Organizers of North America's largest powwow say 2026 will be the event's final yearOrganizers of North America's largest powwow announced the end of the more than 40-year-old Gathering of Nations Saturday.
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New data from the Bureau of Reclamation puts the river and its reservoirs in formal shortage conditions. Policymakers are stuck on ways to fix that in the years to come.
NPR News
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New customs regulations take effect August 29, and many European postal agencies and companies say until new systems are set up they can't ship some goods. Gifts worth less than $100 are not affected.
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What happens when people stop trusting their government's economic data? Planet Money's Mary Childs reports on what happened in Greece.
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NPR's Alina Selyukh reports on what we know about the impact of boycotts on Target's bottom line and how the company's sales reflect a complex picture.
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NPR's Scott Detrow speaks with Cal Newport, author and computer science professor at Georgetown, about AI's limitations and if progress within the industry has stalled.
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An Episcopal priest founded a Christian psychedelic society and was later stripped of his ordination -- raising moral, ethical and spiritual questions about psychedelics and spirituality.
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The monsoon looks to return and stick around through the extended forecast. Check in with the NWS Flagstaff for the latest information