Phoenix Councilman Demands That Plagiarizing ASU Professor Return Money to City

Phoenix Councilman Sal DiCiccio is demanding that a plagiarizing Arizona State University professor return money for allegedly plagiarizing material he prepared for an anti-bias police training program. DiCiccio says Matthew Whittaker’s firm, The Whitaker Group, was paid $21,800 by the city after Whitaker sent invoices for the time it took…

Ben Carson Brings His God-Loving Message to Phoenix

Republican Presidential candidate Dr. Ben Carson delivered his God-fearing, Constitution-loving message to about 6,000 people Tuesday night in the Phoenix Convention Center. The night began with prayer, the pledge of allegiance, a speech from a former patient, and a heartfelt musical performance from a pastor who wrote a song for…

Animas River Spill Unleashes Potential Disaster on Navajo Nation

“We’re in the ‘red zone’ right now. Today, tomorrow is probably it,” says Duane “Chili” Yazzie, chapter president of the Shiprock Community on the Navajo Nation Reservation. “We’re about to lose a lot of our crops.” Two weeks after an accident in an abandoned mine in Colorado caused more than 3…

Downtown Tempe Merchants Want Homeless Banned From Sidewalks

The homeless sit in groups on the sidewalks of downtown Tempe, faithful dogs panting by their sides, sometimes chatting among themselves, sometimes hailing passersby to ask for cash, water, or cigarettes — and it drives merchants crazy. Angelica Seliga, a manager at the BMO Harris Bank on Mill Avenue, used…

Sheriff Joe Arpaio’s Enemies Are Closer Than Ever to Taking Him Down

When it comes to Sheriff Joe Arpaio’s 22-year reign over Maricopa County, a cursory glance at newspaper clippings from earlier in his career reveals that some things never change. Consider Arpaio’s penchant for investigating his enemies, his critics, and anyone who stands in his way. In January 1999, Maricopa County…

10 Best #Rebrand Arizona Submissions

As governor, what do you do if your state’s incarceration rate is 48 percent higher than the national average and is full of fourth-graders who can’t read? If you’re Governor Doug Ducey, you use tax dollars to launch a “rebranding” campaign, duh!  Ever since Ducey asked the public to submit…

Tempe Considers Ban on Puppy Mills

Puppy-mill breeders, beware — Tempe is the latest Arizona city to consider a ban on the commercial sale of dogs and cats in pet stores. The move is part of a national campaign to crack down on puppy mills — breeding facilities where animals are kept in crowded, inhumane conditions and…

Joe Arpaio’s DACA Challenge Tossed Out by U.S. Appeals Court

No, Sheriff Joe Arpaio, you can’t sue President Obama for filling up Maricopa County jails. That’s what three judges with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit concluded when they affirmed a lower court decision to dismiss Arpaio’s lawsuit challenging the president’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals and…

Women Near End of Walk to “Save Oak Flat” as Mining Fight Heats Up

A mother-and-daughter activist duo are nearing the end of their walk from Washington state to Arizona in protest of the pending destruction of the Oak Flat area near Superior because of copper mining. Sally Noedel, 54, and her daughter, Emma Bigongiari, 19, braved heat waves and talked to people in…

Top 10 Beautiful Salt River Wild Horses

The Tonto National Forest Service says the horses who run free along the Salt River are abandoned livestock, wreaking havoc on the landscape. Simone Netherlands, president of the Salt River Wild Horse Management Group, a nonprofit that has been monitoring the herd for more than 17 years, says they are…

Phoenix Hits 117 Degrees — One of Hottest Days Ever in Valley

Friday started off with a withering low temperature of 93 degrees, giving Valley residents a hint of the heat-blast to come. By late afternoon, metro Phoenix reached a record-setting 117 degrees, the National Weather Service confirmed. It wasn’t the hottest day in Phoenix ever — that record of 122 degrees…

Water Wasters: Here Are Some of the Biggest in Metro Phoenix

Top residential water users in Tempe and Glendale use 10 to 30 times as much as average customers, with totals of 2.5 million and 3.6 million gallons consumed respectively in 2014, research by Phoenix New Times shows. The biggest users of water in the non-residential category for those cities, meanwhile, add…