At Borderlands Produce Rescue, shoppers score enough food to share for just $15. It may be 'the best kept secret in town.'
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With a new menu every week, this sandwich pop-up draws fans eager to try the latest creation.
Eyes watering? Nose burning? Face grimacing? Thank the Salt River Landfill that spontaneously burst into flames.
"He doesn't live here. He doesn't talk to us. He won't meet with us. Eli Crane has not been present."
A deep, and personal dive, into the 'Holy Triumvirate's' 13th studio release.
Scotty Bach was a Seattle cop when he went to the "Stop the Steal" rally in D.C. Now he carries a badge in Phoenix.
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All are welcome at the two-day festival happening in downtown Phoenix on Oct. 19 and 20.
Coffee prices are at an all-time high. Now, tariffs leave coffee shop owners hard-pressed to manage costs.
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CBD Inhalers Being Tested
Arizona hasn't had a measles case - yet. But with a low vaccination rate and funding cutbacks, an outbreak is inevitable.
Chase Field offers the cheapest fan experience in one of the worst stadiums in pro baseball.
Nourish Phoenix and United Food Bank are Phoenix beneficiaries for cannabis giant Curaleaf's Feed the Block program, which raises money to support food banks, homeless shelters and nonprofits across the U.S.
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The biannual Errl Cup offered something for everyone, from cannabeasts to casual users, during the two-day festival of competitions, pop-up smoke shops, merch, and more.
When Anna Walker moved into her apartment complex about four years ago, a retrofitted motel built decades prior, she could swing the monthly cost of $500. But now that it has skyrocketed to $800 a month she can't afford it anymore. And she's not alone.
"Excessive" means something different in Phoenix, where residents can count on a heat wave every summer.
"Cash buyers are going to win it all day long," Lieb said.
Everyone had a COVID hobby, and Kayleigh's was responding to letters she received from Phoenix Jehovah's Witnesses.
Heat deaths in Arizona reached a record high last year. But making good shade is difficult, expensive, and can be water-intensive.
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The Corporation Commission has yet to ask public health experts when is too hot to shut off power to people's homes.
Another inmate's hand was crushed in a machine, and one woman was impaled in the groin.
The Corporation Commission contacted Arizona State University shortly after Phoenix New Times published a story about its failure to seek input from scientists.
Its decision came after Mary Stinson, an inmate who made $4.25 an hour working at Hickman's, lost a finger while doing maintenance there.