The ongoing wildfires in Southern California may intensify the already competitive housing market in Arizona, as experts predict an increase in migration from California.
The Arizona Department of Forestry and Fire Management sent 150 people and equipment to Southern California to combat wildfires that erupted Jan. 7.
Utility workers from the Navajo Nation headed to Los Angeles on Thursday to help rebuild the electrical grid damaged by historic southern California wildfires. The Navajo Tribe Utility Authority announced 11 team members specializing in electric line work were sent from Fort Defiance, Arizona, to the Los Angeles area.
Horses Help and One Step Wild Burros and Mustang Rescue are loading a truck of supplies for horses evacuating southern California, and they need your help.
including Arizona and Southern California. This clear expert consensus hasn't stopped president-elect Donald Trump, who has called climate change "an expensive hoax" while supporting more oil ...
Multiple Southern Arizona fire departments have crews on the ground in Southern California. Due to increasingly changing fire conditions, the jobs of these firefighters can change from
As raging fires battered Los Angeles County in early 2025, critics put a spotlight on the US state of California's environmental policies, seeking to blame water conservation programs to help endangered fish or truck emission regulations.
The Arizona Department of Forestry and Fire Management sent 150 people and equipment to Southern California to combat wildfires that erupted on Jan. 7, according to spokesperson Tiffany Davila.
Some experts predict Californians will migrate to Arizona, and that could impact the already competitive housing market in the state.
Our phones are blowing up from LA residents looking for rentals,” said agent Scott Grigg of Griggs's Group Powered by The Altman Brothers.
The incoming storm system will bring the most rain to many Southern California cities since the water year began.
Todd Graham and Kenny Dillingham have seen success in Tempe. Although the two are far apart in experience as a head coach, they both have their own philosophies that come from two different eras.