Across Arizona|News|
Big Dogs May Be Key To Protecting AZ Herds From Mexican Gray Wolf
Farming in AZ often involves traveling long distances to check on crops or livestock. And many farms share one thing in common – a farm dog.

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.
Farming in AZ often involves traveling long distances to check on crops or livestock. And many farms share one thing in common – a farm dog.

From July 2017 through June 2018, more than 200 people moved to Maricopa County each day, in search of sun, jobs and low cost of living.
Look around central Phoenix and you see cranes, construction sites and impressive new buildings. The signs of a boom are everywhere.
Housing is considered affordable if it costs no more than 30% of your income. But as Phoenix rents rise, affordable housing is out of reach.
Deaths of despair — the catchall name for deaths from drug overdoses, alcohol and suicide – have seen “alarming” increases across the U.S.
The Sierra Club and other environmental groups have called for Arizona to shut down a uranium mine near the Grand Canyon.
Marlene Beebe and Nikki Cowley’s homes were 2 of 55 homes in Hoback Ranches in western Wyoming that burned in the Sept. 2018 Roosevelt Fire.
"It's an amazing experience."
Shingletown, nicknamed Little Paradise, is one of the California's most wildfire-vulnerable communities.
When Rachel Miller welds, she wields power in a male-dominated industry.
Between pivotal U.S. storms lie hundreds of smaller disasters that garner a fraction of the national attention — and federal dollars.
Tolleson Union High School District, in the West Valley, became overcrowded and was able to qualify for a new school with state funds.
"The water was running orange, red, a coppery color through the entire Rio Sonora."
The monsoon thunderstorms have finally arrived to the Phoenix metro area after a delayed start to the season.
Steven Juniel, an up-and-coming drag queen in Arizona, is self-described as “large and in charge.”
A child-abuse center in Phoenix places everyone crucial to helping these children in one place.
"It gives the message that such a thing is possible," says Michael E. Smith, director of the ASU Teotihuacán Research Laboratory.
Legendary American architect Frank Lloyd Wright began construction on Taliesin West, meant to be his winter home, in 1937.
The camp, also held at Illinois, Connecticut and Houston, is designed to give top high school players an idea of the college level.
Summer in Arizona comes with some big hazards. So it could be easy to forget one of the tiniest perils.