The Pima County Recorder’s Office says they may have assigned incorrect party ballots in the Tucson City Council primary elections in Ward 3, 5 and 6, which are the ones where there are primary elections on Aug. 5. Council Members are voted on in the ward they wish to represent in the primary election, and are voted on at-large in the general election.
The Recorder's Office blames the mishap on complications connected to overlap of concurring elections, which include the Congressional primary and the city of South Tucson special recall.
Read the full story on AZPM.org →
More Tucson news
-
Jenn Budd shares her experience as Border Patrol agent in her 2022 memoir called "Against the Wall." She spoke with The Show more about it.
-
Rosie Crocker grew up in the Phoenix area surrounded by mostly concrete, as she remembers it. It wasn’t until she moved to Tucson that she started to notice, explore and love the Sonoran Desert.
-
At news conferences since 84-year-old Nancy Guthrie's apparent abduction from her Tucson-area home, the soft-spoken sheriff of Pima County has tried to walk the line between keeping the public informed while withholding investigation details.
-
TEP’s proposed hike would see rates increase this fall. According to the utility, the average Tucson household would pay $16 more each month — which it argues is needed to help cover rising costs and support recent investments.
-
Tucson City Council meetings were packed with residents protesting Project Blue data center residents were concerned about excessive energy and water use.