Phoenix Fire Department: Body found beyond resuscitation in a Phoenix canal Phoenix Police say firefighters first on scene found the body of an adult floating in the canal and technical rescue teams recovered the body, but the person was beyond any life-saving measures. There ... 11/23/2024 - 1:08 pm | View Link
Phoenix-area suspect chased by one police department, caught at another's headquarters About 11 p.m., Phoenix officers in the area of 27th Avenue and Glendale Avenue attempted to stop a vehicle for a traffic violation, but the vehicle fled from the scene and was tracked to the Tempe ... 11/23/2024 - 10:36 am | View Link
Man found dead in central Phoenix canal Authorities recovered a body on Saturday afternoon in a canal near 22nd Avenue and Indian School Road in Phoenix. Here's what we know. 11/23/2024 - 10:36 am | View Link
Teen boy seriously hurt after shooting in south Phoenix Seven months ago, Rita Perkins and her mother were enjoying a nice evening at home when suddenly, police say, a DUI driver crashed through her living room. Arizona State will take the field against ... 11/23/2024 - 7:54 am | View Link
2 swanky new restaurants — and a martini bar — are coming soon to downtown Phoenix "I had my eyes on that space for four years," he said. Expected opening: Second quarter of 2025. Details: 455 N. Third St., Phoenix. 2 swanky new restaurants — and a martini bar — are coming soon to ... 11/23/2024 - 1:01 am | View Link
EVERGREEN — Trunks and logs lie askew, fresh-cut stumps dot the landscape and dozens of piles of ponderosa branches, browned and desiccated, sit on the forest floor at Alderfer/Three Sisters park in the Jefferson County foothills.
To Ruthe Hannigan, a 31-year Evergreen resident walking through the park on a chilly October morning, the sight of so many downed trees and exposed stumps is tantamount to “a great combination of awfulness.”
“They’re not doing fire mitigation, they’re selling it as fire mitigation,” said Hannigan, 75.
This story was originally published by Grist and is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration.
It’s November and it’s unseasonably warm as John John Brown, a Muscogee elder, works to replant peach saplings. “I haven’t had much luck growing them from seed,” he says. The reason, he thinks, is because peaches need lower temperatures.