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Attorney General Kris Mayes is taking a legal swat at Republicans who are trying to take away the right to vote from the adult children of Arizona residents who are living overseas.
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A Yuma Schools Transportation school bus caught fire Tuesday afternoon, but Yuma School District One reports no one present was harmed.
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Students at Fourth Avenue Junior High and neighboring Roosevelt Elementary School will be able to get free medical services this August when they are visited by a mobile clinic.
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The newly adopted $16.1 billion budget has left some Democrats wondering whether there was a better deal to be had.
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A plan to balance the state budget squeaked out of the state Legislature late Saturday over the objections of some Republicans who said it spends too much and Democrats who said it spends too little.
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Arizona Edition Friday is KAWC's weekly look at topics and people shaping the community, with insightful conversations and in-depth reporting from the field.
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South Yuma County city residents wanted their own high school for decades. Now that it made it through it's first year, what do students, parents and educators think?
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It's unlikely Arizona Republicans will be impeaching Attorney General Kris Mayes -- at least not this year.
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City of Yuma Mayor Doug Nicholls discusses President Joe Biden's recent executive order to secure the southern border, HCR 2060, the city budget, and the upcoming election.
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Attorney General Kris Mayes says if state lawmakers and Gov. Katie Hobbs want to immediately seize $75 million out of an opioid settlement fund to balance the state budget they're going to have to come and get it.
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Mark Finchem and his attorney can't escape a court order that they pay more than $47,000 in legal fees in his unsuccessful attempt to overturn his 2022 loss in the race for secretary of state.
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The budget deal Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs struck with Republicans who control the state Legislature to solve what is now billed as a $1.4 billion deficit contains pain across all parts of state government -- and spreads it to prisoners, hospitals and future supplies in a state struggling to get enough water to keep growing.