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+4 +1
As the Colorado River is stretched thin by drought, can the 100-year-old rules that divide it still work?
Cowboy Michael Klaren heaved hay bales onto his wagon, climbed aboard and urged his two workhorses to drag it across a meadow, the ground spongy with the meltwater from a snowstorm. Wet boots had raised his spirits on this March morning, as had two wet cow dogs he called Woodrow and Gus. The meadow was off to a more promising head start on spring than he had come to expect after years of drought.
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+20 +1
TSMC reportedly looks to raise a second chip fab in Arizona
Taiwan's chipmaking giant TSMC is said to be preparing to build another semiconductor fabrication plant in Arizona, alongside the facility it completed this summer, in a move that may be seen as a vindication of the US government’s CHIPS Act funding. According to reports in the Wall Street Journal, TSMC is planning to announce in the near future that it will build a further factory for making cutting edge chips at a site just north of Phoenix, adjacent to the $12 billion Fab 21 plant the company decided to construct in 2020.
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+27 +1
How Tucson, Arizona is facing up to a megadrought
As the south-western United States faces the worst drought in more than a millennium, a city on the banks of a dry riverbed may have answers for gleaning water from the desert.
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+14 +1
Cache of 19th-Century Blue Jeans Discovered in Abandoned Arizona Mineshaft
The seven pairs of pants open a portal into life in the Castle Dome mining district
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+20 +1
Google will pay Arizona $85 million over illegally tracking Android users
Google will pay Arizona $85 million to settle a 2020 lawsuit, which claimed that the search giant was illegally tracking Android users..
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+14 +1
GOP quiet as Arizona Democrats condemn abortion ruling
PHOENIX (AP) — Arizona Democrats vowed Saturday to fight for women's rights after a court reinstated a law first enacted during the Civil War that bans abortion in nearly all circumstances, looking to capitalize on an issue they hope will have a major impact on the midterm elections.
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+10 +1
Arizona Legislature won't defend law limiting police filming
The Republican leaders of the Arizona Legislature will not try to defend a new law limiting up-close filming of police that has been blocked by a federal judge, a decision that essentially ends the fight over the contentious proposal.
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+13 +1
This Former WNBA Athlete Is Giving Urban Farming Her Best Shot
Former basketball player and coach Bridget Pettis found a new purpose after co-founding Project Roots, a Phoenix-based nonprofit that nourishes the local community with gardening and education.
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+20 +1
Arizona Republicans enact a controversial new proof-of-citizenship voting law
Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey on Wednesday signed legislation to expand U.S. citizenship voting requirements in the state, a measure that critics warn will jeopardize the voter registrations of thousands of Arizona residents.
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+25 +1
First year of legal recreational cannabis brings in $1 billion revenue, surpassing projections
Saturday will mark one year since recreational marijuana sales were legalized in Arizona, bringing in more than $1 billion in total revenue.
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+21 +1
The Colorado River's shortage is a sign of a larger crisis
For farmers in the deserts of central Arizona, success and failure is defined by who has water and who does not. At the moment, Dan Thelander is still among the haves. Inside a municipal building in Pinal County, Thelander rolls a map out across the board room table. On the patchwork of brown desert and green farmland in front of us, Thelander points out the parcels of land where he and his brother, son and nephew grow cotton, alfalfa and several other crops.
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+12 +1
Arizona auditors backtrack, say no election data destroyed
PHOENIX (AP) — Firms hired to run a partisan audit of the 2020 election for Senate Republicans in Arizona said Tuesday that data was not destroyed, reversing earlier allegations that election officials in the state's most populated county eliminated evidence.
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+15 +1
Twitter Is a Cauldron of Misinformation About the Arizona 2020 Vote Audit
Six months after the 2020 election, the Arizona state Senate is conducting what it calls an “audit” of Maricopa County’s November results. The process has been roundly and rightly criticized as chaotic and partisan by election security and administration professionals—including members of the county’s own Board of Elections, which is not participating.
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+9 +1
'This is literally an industry': drone images give rare look at for-profit Ice detention centers
Imagine how it feels there, locked up, the whole day without catching the air, without … seeing the light, because that is a cave there, in there you go crazy; without being able to see my family, just being able to listen to them on a phone and be able to say, ‘OK, bye,’ because the calls are expensive.”
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+21 +1
Arizona Republicans Censure Party Leaders At Odds With Trump
State GOP members passed resolutions to condemn three party leaders who they said failed to support former President Donald Trump: Gov. Doug Ducey, former Sen. Jeff Flake and Cindy McCain.
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+16 +1
Arizona legislature closes after Giuliani spent two days with maskless GOP lawmakers
Hours after President Trump tweeted Rudy Giuliani's coronavirus diagnosis, legislative staff in Arizona’s Capitol abruptly announced a week-long closure of the state Senate and House starting Monday.
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+18 +1
Backup driver in fatal Arizona Uber self-driving car crash charged with negligent homicide
PHOENIX -- The backup Uber driver involved in the first self-driving vehicle fatality has been charged with negligent homicide for being distracted in the moments before fatally striking a woman in suburban Phoenix.
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+4 +1
Arizona gave women the right to vote years before the nation, but not without a fight
Arizona gave women the right to vote in 1912. But the constitutional provision could have been adopted even earlier, if not for the liquor lobby.
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+15 +1
Phoenix church hosting Trump rally claims new air unit eliminates 99% of coronavirus
The video claims church officials have found a way to pretty much wipe out COVID-19 with the help of an air purifying system.
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+12 +1
Arizona national monument, home to sacred Native American burial sites, is being blown up for the border wall
The blasts are taking place on an UNESCO Biosphere Reserve, and Native American burial site.
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