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This summer marked 10 years of graduating residents from Onvida Health's residency program. Program Director Kristina Diaz talks program success.
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Economists in Arizona and around the country said tariffs, cracking down on immigration, tax cuts and reduced energy credits will likely have a direct effect on the economy, and with President-elect Donald Trump soon to take office and having promised policy reform in many areas, change is likely on the way.
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Ruben Gallego was in Somerton in late December. Before he was sworn into the U.S. Senate today, he spoke with KAWC about opening an office in Yuma and what impact he thinks immigration sweeps would have in Arizona.
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Newly elected Sen. Ruben Gallego said Thursday said he is prepared to support the deportation of "a certain type of illegal immigrants,'' a category he did not define.
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The federal government has been threatening for close to a decade to keep us off of planes unless we have a Real ID or passport. Well, it now appears the feds are finally getting serious, setting a May 7 deadline for enforcement. Maybe.
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As Arizona farmers have grappled with inflation, falling crop prices and the effects of a changing climate, the incoming Trump administration could take action to reform the nation's industrial agriculture system and offer some help.
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SB 1036 seeks to expand existing laws that make it illegal for cities to use taxpayer dollars to convince voters to cast their ballots a certain way. Ditto counties, school districts and special districts that are seeking approval to borrow money.
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Michael Appiah played for AWC Matadors in Yuma, now set to join Lionel Messi in MLS.
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An inmate who died in June at the state prison in Yuma just days after undergoing hernia repair surgery succumbed from an unrelated and natural cause, according to an autopsy performed after a federal judge overseeing historically bad Arizona prisoner healthcare ordered the death review.
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This year was a bumpy ride for the Colorado River. As 2024 comes to a close, we’re looking at the stories that defined the water supply for 40 million people.
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Arizona could be doing more to improve conservation policy, according to a new report by the Center for Western Priorities.