The very wet and extended winter is going to cause fire havoc in much of Arizona’s grasslands, the state’s chief fire management officer said Monday, March 18.
For the second, and last time, Aliyah Alpert of Prescott will have a chance to wow viewers on a national stage with her penchant for spelling words most people would be clueless to find even armed with an electronic dictionary.
A program that saves Yavapai County home builders about $10,000 in architectural costs has now been used by about 50 property owners in communities from Congress to Paulden and has generated inquiries from several other Arizona communities.
Gov. Katie Hobbs vetoed the “Starter Homes Act” Monday, March 18, saying the provisions in the bipartisan bill would create problems without any assurance it actually would make housing more affordable.
Stuart Rosebrook, editor of True West magazine, a professional historian, writer and editor, will answer “What Happened on the Old Black Canyon Highway?” at 1 p.m. Monday, April 15.
After a new round of recruitment for a city manager, the City of Prescott has narrowed the field down to three finalists for the job, including applicants who have had management experience in Arizona, California and Colorado.
A once rebellious teenage girl in Colorado credits the adults in her life who were able to see beyond the adolescent tumult and push her to be someone better, a role model and leader for others.
Kari Lake and Mark Finchem want the U.S. Supreme Court to give them a do-over of their losing claim that machines used to tabulate votes in some Arizona counties are so inherently unreliable that they violate their constitutional rights.
A Whiskey Row hotel proposal that has generated considerable controversy over the past two years is scheduled to be back on a Prescott City Council agenda in late March.