Arizona has come up with a way to restart some home building, while being careful about groundwater use. We’ll hear from a longtime water lawyer on finding that balance. Plus, one chef's mission to deliver cancer-fighting meals across the Valley.
-
An escalating fight between state lawmakers and Tolleson Union High School District Superintendent Jeremy Calles led to an audit of the district’s finances and a defamation lawsuit against a lawmaker this week.
-
Phoenix Art Museum is launching a new live music series this month called SOUNDCHECK. It kicks off Oct. 16 with 76th Street, a band that was one of the musical guests at last year’s Stonewall Inn Brick Awards Gala in New York City.
-
Jennifer Caraway is a celebrated chef and "Chopped" champion whose career has been built around a singular mission: to uplift cancer patients through food. It’s manifested in the Joy Bus, a nonprofit that delivers meals to homebound cancer patients.
-
A little more than two years ago, the state Department of Water Resources announced a moratorium on building new homes in some parts of the Valley that rely on groundwater. That came after the agency determined that there wasn’t an assured hundred-year water supply in those areas, as required under state law.
-
As legislators attempt to adjust to upcoming tax cuts, longtime Arizona economist Randie Stein has one word for the state of our state's economy right now: sluggish.