Complaints and Animal Deaths Rattled Now-Closed State Wildlife Center
Former volunteers say that mistakes and bad practices plagued the wildlife center’s final years, with consequences for the animals.
Former volunteers say that mistakes and bad practices plagued the wildlife center’s final years, with consequences for the animals.
Arizona Wildlife Federation, Trout Unlimited skeptical that Trump’s Interior Department really has no plans to restart uranium mining near Grand Canyon.
To hear APS tell it, an upcoming clean energy ballot measure would be doomsday for the Palo Verde nuclear plant.
“Who knows who Reliable Energy Policy is?”
Trees can help a city cool down. But the city has let its plans for a leafy urban shade canopy wither, activists say.
“When you lose it, it’s gone. You can’t get it back.”
New Times obtained a draft of the proposed constitutional amendment. The energy initiative is affiliated with a group founded by billionaire Trump critic Tom Steyer.
Today’s technology places physical limits of what’s possible, author and professor Tom Rez says.
Tom Steyer-funded group touts health benefits of measure that would require the state’s utilities to use clean energy to generate 50 percent of electricity needs.
Phoenix officials don’t know if an “ambitious” sustainability goal will save or cost money.
It’s not free to promote Arizona’s “open for business” climate, in contrast to a dysfunctional federal government.
“Ultimately, the real issue here is that there is so much that we don’t know,” says Amber Reimondo, energy program director of the Grand Canyon Trust.
“It’s been a bit of a shock-and-awe year for us,” the organization’s new executive director said.
In a driving-centric city like Phoenix, getting to net-zero emissions could take some creativity.
Arizonans will get to vote in 2018 on a clean-energy measure that will help the future, firm says.
“Two years ago, the Salt River wild horses were almost removed and slaughtered. Today is a great day.”
Water trucks serving New River-area communities can keep filling at Phoenix fire hydrants for a few more months.
A streak of six consecutive years of dry weather in Arizona “may be evidence of the changing climate.”
America’s newest national monument, located in Utah on Arizona’s northern border, was also the first ever proposed by American Indian tribes. Now President Trump’s administration wants to shrink it.
“Who stands to bear the risks and pay the ultimate costs are the public and Native American tribes,” said a director with the Grand Canyon Trust.
The clock is ticking for water-seeking residents in the New River and Desert Hills communities north of Phoenix.