Across Arizona|News|
Migrant AZ Families Sue Over ‘Extraordinary Harms’ Of Family Separation
Five asylum-seeking families have sued the government for the “substantial and ongoing trauma” they say they suffered after being separated.

Cronkite News is the news division of Arizona PBS. The daily news products are produced by the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University.
Five asylum-seeking families have sued the government for the “substantial and ongoing trauma” they say they suffered after being separated.

An ADHS report shows 156 confirmed and probable cases in Arizona, with all but 11 in Maricopa County.
In 2012-13, 301 females in Arizona played hockey. That number jumped to 764 in 2018-19 thanks to the work of Olympian Lyndsey Fry.
The number of Arizonans without health insurance rose by about 55,000 people last year, according to new data from the Census Bureau.
Young people took to the streets demanding global leaders act to mitigate climate change. About 2,000 people marched in downtown Phoenix.
Every September, each MLB club nominates a player to be considered for the Award and its winner is typically announced in late October.
An intraparty threat to censure AZ Sen. Kyrsten Sinema is on hold, but progressives who called for the vote said they achieved their goal.
A new report claims that Arizona loses as much as $1.9 billion every year to costs directly associated with gun violence.
The vaquita marina is the world’s smallest and most endangered marine mammal, with as few as 10 remaining in Mexico’s Sea of Cortez.
“The airwaves are essential elements to communicate and frankly to survive,” said the Santa Fe Indian School's chief technology director.
The report by the Department of Health and Human Services inspector general evaluated 45 immigrant detention facilities.
Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey joined business leaders in Washington to push for final approval of the “critical” U.S.-Mexico-Canada agreement.
A federal appeals court ruled that witnesses to Arizona executions have a First Amendment right to hear the entire execution process.
“We know where we are going, and that is going to be a world where wetlands, especially in the arid West, get almost no protection."
They are educators, healthcare professionals and even the guy who scoops your ice cream. What brings them together is a passion for "footy."
An Arizona squirrel near extinction is getting some help from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
The median age of a farmer or rancher in Arizona is 55 to 64. It’s part of a nationwide trend as fewer young people go into agriculture.
Electric vehicle owners can now drive to Grand Canyon National Park without worrying about dead batteries.
A federal court ruled that a Phoenix death-row inmate should have another chance to prove his attorney did not fully investigate.
As Hurricane Dorian approached the Bahamas, Phoenix Suns center Deandre Ayton had a good idea about what was in store.