Many offices have changed post-pandemic, with companies looking to bring workers back to the office. How a firm that helps other companies design their spaces remade its office. And, one Arizona farmer says persistent drought is putting her family farm's future in question. That and more on The Show.
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There’s a much-cited statistic we often hear when we’re talking about the Colorado River water and drought in Arizona: Most of it — about 70% — goes to agriculture.
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As of the beginning of this month, Arizona-based Sprouts Farmers Market has become the official grocer of the Southeastern Conference.
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Offices across Arizona, and the country, have been undergoing changes — especially since the pandemic, when many workers did their jobs remotely. There have also been a lot of conversations about how to get employees back to the office, and what kinds of office spaces they want.
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Collections is series from The Show devoted to devoted to the things we acquire and treasure. Janet Traylor’s collection of ancient apothecary and medicine bottles is kept in an old wooden ammunition box under the grand piano in her midtown Phoenix home.
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New text messages obtained by Votebeat detail the campaign by some GOP state lawmakers to convince Republican supervisors to take that step — in some cases, assuring them that the move was legal, despite differing opinions from the secretary of state and attorney general.
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Melani Martinez has a forthcoming memoir named after the all-important molino in her dad's tamale and tortilla factory El Rapido, of the first in Tucson. In it, she grapples with her family’s story — and what happened to them after her dad sold the factory.