The Phoenix mayor said withdrawing from the global agreement to fight climate change would harm public health and economic prosperity.
Mayor Kate Gallego is looking for wins this week in ... hub set to be fully operational in three years will expand Arizona's semiconductor supply chain. Amkor Technology, an Arizona-based ...
Phoenix Mayor Kate ... Gallego issued the statement as part of Climate Mayors, a coalition she leads of 350 mayors dedicated to advancing "federal and global climate action." Other Arizona climate ...
The funding pause was scheduled to go into effect at 3 p.m. on Tuesday in Arizona. It doesn't affect funding that is provided directly to individuals — such as Medicare and Social Security — and it is designed to only impact programs that are related to the flurry of executive orders Trump signed when he took office.
The district cited declining enrollment and "significant budgetary challenges" as reasons why the closures of Heard and Dunbar schools are necessary.
Metro Phoenix is becoming a world leader in semiconductor manufacturing and microchip R&D, and that is only reshaping our economy for the better.
The temporary funding pause was temporarily blocked by a federal judge shortly before it was set to begin at 3 p.m. on Tuesday in Arizona.
Mayor Kate Gallego and the City Council will meet with ... Phoenix police operate under the provisions of Arizona's Senate Bill 1070 that were upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court.
Dan Kitwood/Getty Kate Middleton made a last-minute decision to join Prince William at a ceremony commemorating Holocaust Memorial Day for her first official appearance since announcing that she ...
Kate Middleton stepped out for some light shopping during a solo outing in London earlier this week. The Princess of Wales, 43, looked chic as she bundled up for a visit to London’s swanky ...
Kate Middleton enjoys shopping spree in Notting Hill a week after revealing she is in remission from cancer Prince William was busy taking care of royal business on Thursday after he visited ...
On Monday, more than 200 state Democrats sent a letter to Arizona’s most powerful Democrats — Gov. Katie Hobbs, Sens. Ruben Gallego and Mark Kelly, and Rep. Greg Stanton — criticizing their ...