Here’s what we know about the seeds that have been mailed to homes in Arizona.
As Arizona begins to welcome students back for virtual learning, the debate over reopening in person continues on.
A petition to protect Joshua trees pertains to California, but the Arizona Joshua Tree Forest faces its own threats.
Tribal leader: Planned execution calls into question the federal government use of loopholes to infringe on the Navajo tribe's sovereignty.
Individual schools can decide not to play fall sports at all due to the coronavirus, but state athletic group hopes they won't.
Arizona wildlife officials think the Chiricahua leopard frogs were seeking better, warmer habitat that protects them against fungal disease.
Environmentalists argue in court that dozens of environmental, health and safety laws were illegally waived speed border wall construction.
Adults and students on reopened school campuses will be requited to wear masks at all times, with some exceptions.
As the coronavirus persists and demand for hand sanitizers grows, people in Arizona may have brands that contain dangerous methanol.
The Arizona governor has informed congressional representatives from the state on what he'd like included in the bill.
The United Daughters of the Confederacy asked the state to give back two monuments to prevent their "complete destruction."
Teachers and food service workers will now be eligible for free coronavirus antibody tests through the University of Arizona.
As virus numbers spike in Arizona, lawyers say prisoners are being subjected to unsanitary conditions and inadequate medical treatment
Superintendent Kathy Hoffman said the already delayed start date may have to be pushed back again amid continued virus concerns.
As of Monday, Democrats had returned about 195,000 early ballots, compared to 193,000 Republican ballots.
A sharp increase in new cases has been reported in Arizona, as numbers more than doubled those of the day before.
The number of total coronavirus cases confirmed in Arizona has gone above 145,000.
With the coronavirus out of control and Arizona, some have made clear they don't approve of heavy-handed government mask requirements.
Gov. Doug Ducey wants schools to resume in-person classes by Aug. 17. That's too soon, parents and educators say.
Gov. Doug Ducey also announced a $5 million foreclosure prevention program to help people who rely on rent checks from their tenants.
Arizona police agencies have received 10 percent of the more than $850 million in surplus military equipment received nationwide.
Sen. Martha McSally raised an impressive $9.3 million in the second quarter, but still trails her likely Democratic opponent in fundraising.
In Phoenix and Tucson, the third- and fourth-fastest warming cities in America, the plan unveiled by Democrats could be a game-changer.
Arizona's three public universities joined in lawsuit challenging the Trump administration rule, which was abruptly rescinded this week.
The heat is on Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey to extend his moratorium on evictions as coronavirus illnesses and temperatures soar.
Renewal by Andersen has a special One-Month-Only Flash Sale on all of its windows, front entry doors and patio doors until July 31.
A new report says Arizona had the highest rate of fatalities on its interstate highways in 2018.
For this year’s delayed Tax Day, we’re taking a look at new IRS data.
After suggesting "Code Talkers" as the new nickname for Washington's NFL team, Navajo Nation President Jonathan Nez walked back the idea.
Comet Neowise is going prime time, moving into the evening sky. You’ll be able to see it with the naked eye in Arizona.
Arizona is bracing for a possible tsunami of evictions after its ban expires July 22. Hundreds of evictions appear to be already underway.
Three Arizona teachers were infected and one died after they shared a summer classroom. "If we can't stay safe, how can students stay safe?"
Ducey on Thursday announced he was limiting indoor dining at restaurants to less than 50 percent of their capacity.
Native American tribes are among the groups most vulnerable to the coronavirus, but have yet to see aid approved in March by Congress.
Republican state Sen. Sylvia Allen said Arizona shouldn't be governed through executive order but by legislative action.
Although new coronavirus case activity may have hit a plateau, about 3,500 new cases are still being reported every day.
Most of the 81,000 loans totaling $13 billion were made in the Scottsdale area that said 32,000 jobs would be saved.
Arizona has one of the largest outbreaks at a child rehabilitation center in the country, which advocates call a health and moral crisis.
Arizona hospitals are coping with the coronavirus surge, but one nurse said seeing the constant stream of sick patients is “soul-crushing.”
The Goldwater Institute is an active player at the Capitol, and its employees testify frequently in committees, but only one is a lobbyist.