Fully vaccinated individuals can resume activities without wearing a mask and physical distancing in indoor or outdoor settings, in most cases, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s
Innovative state program helped marijuana industry
Federal banking laws have created more than just an isolated crisis for Arizona’s multi-billion–dollar marijuana industry. They’ve created a dangerous problem for the state of Arizona. Banking laws make it nearly impossible for cannabis dispensaries to obtain basic financial services such as a checking account. As a result, a multi-billion–dollar legal Arizona industry is forced to operate in all cash. Imagine driving around tens and even hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash to pay vendors, landlords, suppliers, and utility bills. Imagine a legitimate business taking in millions in all cash that cannot be deposited in a bank account and must be stored on-site. This is the grim reality for cannabis dispensaries.
Across Arizona, nearly 400,000 children will be eligible to receive Pfizer/BioNTech's COVID-19 vaccine, after the FDA and CDC gave the greenlight for such vaccinations to take place.
David Abbott, Tucson Weekly
Green Lady master growers Tower Crist and Francisco Carmona can help you get started with your pot growing adventure or give advice to the advanced grower.
Growing your own pot can be a rewarding experience, particularly when you consider how much it costs to buy your weed at the local dispensary.
But getting started can be difficult, so what better place to learn about the ins and outs of the craft than an established hydroponics shop with a full-blown nursery attached?
Green Lady Hydroponics is a locally owned business established in 2017 at the iconic Green Things Nursery, which has been in operation since 1970 serving generations of Tucson gardeners and plant aficionados.
Christina Duran/Tucson Weekly
On a recent Friday night,
Paul Madero walked into downtown s Fox Tucson Theatre mobile vaccination site following almost a month in the hospital thanks to a mountain bike accident. Madero s daughter, April Madero, had already gotten her family vaccinated, but was unable to get her father an appointment. April saw the Fox Theater offered vaccinations without an appointment and brought her father.
Madero, 65, did not have much hesitation as his daughter made the appointment for him. She s the one that made the appointment, so I figured it was safe, said Madero.
On recent Friday nights, as some people were heading home from their jobs and others were headed out for a night at now-open bars and clubs, the Fox opened its doors, not for a show, but to provide no-appointment walk-in Moderna vaccinations.