Latest Local News
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A coalition of groups has formally asked Arizona utility regulators to provide economic resources for communities near closed coal-fired power plants.
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Former President Trump wrote in his endorsement that Lake Havasu Sen. Sonny Borrelli "has been on the front line of fighting against corrupt elections since day one."
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No bird species is more closely associated with the ponderosa pine than the pygmy nuthatch. These tiny, highly social birds are year-round residents with white breasts and grey heads and wings.
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Coconino County flood control officials have approved millions of dollars in funding for forest restoration in areas at high risk for wildfire and flooding near Flagstaff and Williams.
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An Ohio man who acknowledged making death threats in voicemails left for then-Arizona Secretary of State Katie Hobbs during the 2022 election season was sentenced Monday to 2 1/2 years in prison.
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Crews will begin to install water and sewer utility infrastructure across Milton Road next month. It's one of the final steps in the first phase of the Beulah/University Realignment Project.
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Arizona legislative leaders and the state Chamber of Commerce are suing the Biden administration over newly announced air-quality standards.
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The $1.2 trillion budget package passed by Congress Friday didn't include an extension for the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act. The legislation compensates people who lived downwind from nuclear test sites and developed cancer as a result.
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Fredonia Mayor Christy Riddle and her son, Trevor Burrows, were killed in a head-on collision on Navajo Route 20 on March 16.
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Fire managers on the Apache-Sitgreaves National Forests plan a series of large prescribed burns this spring.
NPR News
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Legal experts are calling on Congress to put new restrictions on a president's power to deploy troops on American soil.
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For decades, youth employment was down. But now the labor market is stretched thin and young people are working again.
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It's been a chalky year for the NCAA basketball tournaments. Only one double-digit seed is left between the men's and women's Sweet Sixteens.
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Sen. Eva Burch announced on the senate floor that she is seeking an abortion for an unviable pregnancy.
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As the Men's Sweet 16 round of the NCAA tournament kick off tomorrow, NPR's Mary Louise Kelly speaks with TNT Sports sideline reporter and bracketology expert, Andy Katz.
Sunny, spring afternoons continue over the coming days, turning progressively windier each day into Saturday. This ahead of an Easter Sunday storm that will bring widespread rain and mountain snow, stay tuned as details become more clear.
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