-
This summer marked 10 years of graduating residents from Onvida Health's residency program. Program Director Kristina Diaz talks program success.
-
-
A Mohave County supervisor is renewing his bid to trim the legal rights of Attorney General Kris Mayes.
-
Pride Month is here and new research has found most consumers stand behind brands who show their support to the LGBTQ+ community.
-
The board may change boundaries elsewhere, but long-term plans may include building new classrooms, a new school and converting two others into a K-8 magnet school if a 2026 bond measure passes.
-
Justice Cruz grew up in Yuma, attended Kofa and Yuma high schools and Arizona Western College and later began her legal career here. She was back this week for oral arguments and an investiture ceremony.
-
The Colorado River basin has lost huge volumes of groundwater over the past two decades according to a new report from researchers at Arizona State University.
-
The Arizona Legislature violated the state constitution's Gift Clause in 2023 when it earmarked $15.3 million for the non-profit foundation that runs the Prescott Frontier Days rodeo, a judge has ruled.
-
Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs brought nearly a dozen hospital officials to the Capitol Thursday as part of a public relations effort to quash cuts to Medicaid approved by the Republican-controlled U.S. House. Hobbs is in Yuma today.
-
In a debate Thursday, Daniel Butierez and Jorge Rivas who seek to become the GOP nominee for the special election this year to replace Democrat Raul Grijalva who died in March, both proclaimed themselves to be supporters of the president's efforts to raise tariffs.
-
GESD Governing Board Member and City of San Luis Vice Mayor Tadeo De La Hoya joined Latino education policymakers in a professional development institute focused on STEM education earlier this May.
-
Visit is a homecoming for newest Justice Maria Elena Cruz, who began her legal career in Yuma County.