State lawmakers are considering a plan that would transfer water from La Paz County to Valley cities. We’ll hear what some local residents think about that. Plus, with Opening Day upon us, we’ll get a preview of the Diamondbacks season.
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A judge ruled Wednesday that Secretary of State Adrian Fontes did not have the authority to let a political party change its name. The short-lived Arizona Independent Party will revert to its original title.
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State lawmakers are considering a proposal that would allow a New York-based investment company to sell water from rural La Paz County to more urban parts of the state.
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The Arizona Diamondbacks start their 2026 season Thursday evening in LA against the two-time defending champion Dodgers. The D-Backs finished last season with a record of 80-82, in fourth place in the National League West.
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College students have a lot of different ways to compete against one another, whether in sports or groups like chess or debate teams. In Tucson this week, some students are even competing to be the best at old mining techniques.
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The state Department of Corrections, Rehabilitation and Reentry late last week announced it planned to appeal a judge’s ruling that appointed a receiver to oversee Arizona’s prison health care system.
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Ty Bannerman is entrenched in New Mexico. He’s a longtime journalist and writer there who hosts KUNM’s “Let’s Talk New Mexico.” But his roots in the state are tied up in a fraught history.
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Towards the beginning of a new documentary called “Cowgirls: Women of Western Art,” a narrator declares: “The West asks for truth.” For too long, the documentary goes on to argue, Western art hasn’t been truthful in the scenes it depicts, nor in the cohort of artists who are generally recognized for those depictions.