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Gov. Jan Brewer said Tuesday she is ordering state health officials to stop certifying patients to purchase medical marijuana while the legality of the voter-approved law is hashed out in federal court.
The House voted Monday to seek permission to undo programs that voters have required the state to provide or fund.
Mesa and Chandler voters easily approved home rule overrides in their cities that will prevent the communities from making deep service cuts.
A new memo from a top Department of Justice official could undermine the chances of ever setting up a system of medical marijuana growers and dispensaries in Arizona.
Mesa and Chandler school districts may join the ranks of other districts in Arizona that are unable to sell voter-approved bonds in the future because of the recent housing crash.
Gov. Jan Brewer said Tuesday she is ordering state health officials to stop certifying patients to purchase medical marijuana while the legality of the voter-approved law is hashed out in federal court.
Gov. Jan Brewer said Tuesday she is ordering state health officials to stop certifying patients to purchase medical marijuana while the legality of the voter-approved law is hashed out in federal court.
A federal appeals court will hear arguments Friday of whether Arizona voters stepped over the line by denying bail to illegal immigrants charged with certain crimes.
State lawmakers cannot use proceeds from trust land sales or leases to run the Land Department, at least not without getting voter approval, the Arizona Court of Appeals ruled Thursday.
State lawmakers cannot use proceeds from trust land sales or leases to run the Land Department, at least not without getting voter approval, the Arizona Court of Appeals ruled Thursday.
State lawmakers cannot use proceeds from trust land sales or leases to run the Land Department, at least not without getting voter approval, the Arizona Court of Appeals ruled Thursday.
Foes of public financing of elections are trying once again to void parts of the Clean Elections law that Arizona voters approved in 1998.
Injured workers can’t be denied benefits even if they were high when they were hurt, the Arizona Supreme Court ruled Wednesday.
April 15, 2005
State Rep. David Burnell Smith and the Citizens Clean Elections Commission appear headed to a legal showdown that could have sweeping implications for the future of publicly financed political campaigns.
A second lawsuit is challenging the constitutionality of a voter-approved measure that requires people to prove citizenship before registering to vote.
With more teachers anticipated to receive as much as $3,000 in performance pay this summer and upcoming school year, a new state law seeks to make sure they’ve all earned it.
SAN FRANCISCO — San Francisco city officials called Monday for a boycott of Arizona and businesses based there to protest that state's strict new immigration law.
Two illegal immigrants accused of stealing a truck and robbing a man at a park told police that the state’s employer sanctions law and other illegal immigration crackdowns forced them to commit the crimes.
Attorney General Terry Goddard has joined the battle to define how the courts should handle Proposition 100, a voter-approved law which denies bail to illegal immigrants charged with serious felonies.
The new medical marijuana law went into effect Thursday, while potential medical marijuana patients gathered at the Green Relief Expo at University of Phoenix stadium to receive recommendations from doctors.
Pinal County Sheriff Chris Vasquez has asked federal officials to start training his staff on the finer points of immigration law, helping deputies determine who should and shouldn’t be in the United States.
A voter-approved state minimum wage law contains no exemption for disabled workers who employers used to be able to pay less, Arizona Attorney General Terry Goddard concluded Wednesday.
Backers of medical marijuana charge that a federal lawsuit filed late Friday is designed let the governor and the attorney general do in court what they could not convince voters to do: keep the use of the drug illegal in Arizona.
Guest commentary by Phil Kerpen
By Mark Heller, Tribune
By Mark Scarp, contributing columnist
By Jerry Brown, contributing columnist
Guest Commentary by Bill Richardson
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