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Deficit, water, housing big issues for Legislature

State lawmakers returned this week to the Capitol with an overflowing list of major issues that need to be addressed, from water to housing to the economy.

Cottsdale , Arizona , United-states , United-arab-emirates , Phoenix , Ahwatukee , La-paz-county , Saudi-arabia , Eoria , Tempe , Saudi , David-livingston

Local lawmaker endorses toilet-to-tap water

The facts most Arizona residents live in a desert and continue to deal with a long drought are not news. One creative way to help may turn stomachs.

Tempe , Arizona , United-states , Phoenix , Ahwatukee , California , West-chandler , City-of-phoenix , Cave-creek , Stacey-travers , Greg-stanton , Andy-biggs

Water curbs some development in Maricopa County

State water officials said Thursday they won’t issue any permits for new subdivisions for some areas on the fringes of Phoenix, the first real acknowledgment that the state’s water supply

Phoenix , Arizona , United-states , Tucson , Lake-powell , Queen-creek , Salt-river , American , Katie-hobbs , Tom-buschatzke , Department-of-water-resources , Water-resources

Legislation passed could help with Arizona drought

The U.S. House passed a bill introduced by Arizona District 3 Congressman Raul Grijalva that would authorize the Colorado River Indian Tribes to lease a portion of its federal Colorado

Phoenix , Arizona , United-states , California , Lake-powell , American , Raul-grijalva , Mark-kelly , Amelia-flores , Joe-biden , Kyrsten-sinema , Environmental-defense-fund

USFS notices big juniper die-off in northern, central Arizona


USFS notices big juniper die-off in northern, central Arizona
USFS teams noticed thousands of acres of juniper die-off in northern and central Arizona. They attribute the death to water stress brought on by drought. (Source: Kaibab National Forest)
By KOLD News 13 Staff | April 21, 2021 at 2:40 PM MST - Updated April 21 at 4:51 PM
TUCSON, Ariz. (KOLD News 13) - Juniper trees across thousands of acres of Forest Service land are dying and investigators think they know the reason why: Recent assessments suggest the trees are dying from water stress brought on by an “exceptional” drought throughout the state.
Much of the die-off has been in the Prescott and Kaibab National Forests, with about 50,000 to 100,000 acres of junipers impacted between the Paulden and Ash Fork along Highway 89 and Interstate 40, according to a news release from the U.S. Forest Service. Researchers with the USFS Forest Health Protection office also noticed tree death north of Williams along Highway 64.

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