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KNAU has returned to full power on both News/Talk and Classical after APS restored electricity to our transmitter sites atop Devil's Head (Mt. Elden) and Mormon Mountain in the early evening of Wednesday, April 22.

Arizona Public Radio continues to integrate new audio software while addressing remaining glitches. We appreciate your patience and support and will update when all issues are fully resolved.

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  • On today's newscast: Democrat Ruben Gallego has been elected Arizona’s first Latino U.S. senator, the new Arizona State Veteran Home officially opened in Flagstaff, Grand Canyon Railway will convert a train to zero-emission with battery electric power, respiratory viruses are up this fall, and more.
  • On today's newscast: Rep. Crane will represent CD2 in the U.S. House again, President-elect Donald Trump was declared the winner in Arizona, the state's breeding bald eagle population has grown to its largest ever, the Mohave County Board of Supervisors approved a controversial plan to build a new natural gas power plant in Mohave Valley, and more.
  • On today's newscast: The Flagstaff Amtrak station and the Grand Canyon Railway received millions of dollars in federal funding, the Navajo Nation Council approved legislation to tax vapes and other nicotine products, the Goldwater Institute is suing Sedona for refusing d to issue a short-term rental permit for a mobile home park, investigations involving missing and murdered Indigenous people got a boost from the FBI and more. Plus, we look at the race for Arizona’s Second Congressional District,
  • On today's newscast: A long-awaited land swap between the U.S. Forest Service and the Yavapai-Apache Nation has been finalized, a Navajo County Recorder candidate was cited after an alleged road rage incident, more than a quarter of a million people moved to Arizona last year, state officials are taking extra precautions to ensure Election Day goes smoothly and safely, and more...
  • On today's newscast: Vice-presidential nominee Tim Walz will visit Flagstaff Saturday, several other politicians have appeared in northern Arizona to make their final appeals ahead of Election Day, recreational marijuana delivery starts tomorrow, authorities have scaled back search efforts for a missing 75-year-old Pinedale woman, and more. Plus, our ballot breakdown continues with the Arizona Corporation Commission race.
  • On today's newscast: President Biden visits the Gila River Indian Reservation to issue an apology for the U.S. government's role in federal boarding schools, Governor Katie Hobbs and state water regulators move to limit groundwater southeast of Tucson, residents and businesses impacted by the Watch Fire on the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation can apply for recovery loans.
  • On today's newscast: KNAU's Adrian Skabelund reports from VP candidate Tim Waltz's appearance in Window Rock, disaster relief is extended to Havasupai Tribe and members in the wake of August flash flooding, Hualapai Tribal Chairman comments on President Biden's recent apology to Native Americans for the US governments role in boarding schools which sought to eradicate Native cultures, Arizona Game and Fish asks hunters to avoid lead ammo to help protect California Condors.
  • On today's newscast: The election is officially wrapped up in northern Arizona as all county boards, the Navajo Nation placed about 14 acres of land near Flagstaff that houses the former Horseman Lodge Steakhouse into trust, state lawmakers say recently-approved immigration legislation may not be needed after all, and more. Plus, a new Canyon Commentary from author Scott Thybony.
  • On today's newscast: The Navajo Nation Department of Justice has filed a lawsuit against Apache County over delays in processing early ballots, Grand Canyon National Park officials want to increase campsite fees on the South or North Rim, the Coconino County Board of Supervisors allocated $2 million to thin thousands of acres on the west side of the San Francisco Peaks, the Hopi Tribe connected the public water systems to a new regional system after elevated arsenic levels were found in drinking water, and more.
  • On today's newscast: A federally protected female Mexican gray wolf was found dead, the Flagstaff City Council is considering a controversial change to the noise ordinance, crews at Grand Canyon National Park will soon begin the inspection of over 1,400 water service line connections made of "unknown materials," Arizona is one step closer to flying cars, and more.
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