-
Democrat Grijalva faces Republican challenger Daniel Butierez in next month's special election.
-
Arizona Western College's CAMP program is continuing to operate entirely out of college funding this year, but without news on its federal grant renewal, CAMP's future remains up in the air.
-
A group of negotiators – one from each of the seven states including Arizona that use Colorado River water – will not be speaking at a major water law conference in June.
-
Arizonans are in no danger of losing all their water. But the state's top water official is warning that unless a deal is reached with other states, cuts in Colorado River water deliveries could lead to Arizonans having to change their lifestyles.
-
There were 13 bills that the governor on Tuesday found unacceptable. That brings her tally this session up to 138 -- a figure that is just five shy of the record the governor set in her first year in office in 2023.
-
Gov. Katie Hobbs is getting money from special interests and other donors and not disclosing who they are. And it's perfectly legal because of a exception carved into state law nearly a decade ago.
-
Congress examines cuts to Medicaid today, but Arizona advocates argue that many could lose vital health-care services, posing a direct threat to progress made in recent years.
-
Patients showing up at Arizona hospitals won't be asked if they are in this country legally.
-
In a decisive move to protect American livestock and the nation's food supply, U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins on Sunday announced an immediate suspension of live cattle, horse and bison imports through ports of entry along the southern U.S. border.
-
The Arizona Department of Transportation (ADOT) is holding a public hearing this Friday, May 16, to get feedback on its proposed $12.7 billion, five-year construction plan.
-
Senator Ruben Gallego (D-AZ) has introduced a sweeping immigration and border security proposal aimed at fixing what he calls the "broken" state of America's current system.
-
Arizona lawmakers are one vote away from adopting legislation to allow lawsuits against individual teachers by those who contend they are teaching or promoting antisemitism.