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Tucson Local Pulse: Homeland Security Probe, TUSD Funding Drops, Electric School Buses Roll Out

Tucson Local Pulse: Homeland Security Probe, TUSD Funding Drops, Electric School Buses Roll Out

Published 4 months, 2 weeks ago
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Good morning, this is Tucson Local Pulse for Thursday, December eleventh.

We wake up today following a federal investigation on the west side, where Homeland Security Investigations agents serve a search warrant at a transportation business on Miracle Mile between I‑10 and Oracle. News 4 Tucson reports agents load boxes and records as part of a long term probe into alleged wage violations and unlawful labor practices. City Council member Kevin Dahl and Pima County Supervisor Jenn Alan are on scene, and Mayor Regina Romero reminds us that if we protest, we do it peacefully and document what we see.

From city hall, we keep an eye on money and services. KGUN 9 reports an internal audit finds almost fifty four thousand dollars in overpayments to Tucson Police Department personnel, and the city is now working on clawbacks and tighter controls. That affects how our tax dollars show up in patrols and public safety.

On the education front, Arizona Luminaria reports Tucson Unified is bracing for about a three percent enrollment drop, down to roughly thirty five thousand students, which could mean close to eight million dollars less in funding. The board approves more than ten million, mostly from voter approved bonds, to expand classrooms at Rincon and University High near East 5th Street, while tabling a decision on Davis Bilingual Elementary downtown. That means some schools may shrink while specialty programs like mariachi and dual language try to draw families back.

Weather wise, we are mild and sunny today across midtown and the Foothills, with afternoon highs in the low seventies and light winds. That is good news if we plan to bike the Loop or head up to Sabino Canyon after work. Overnight, we cool into the mid forties, and we stay dry and pleasant into the weekend.

In business news, mining activity north of town draws global interest. ShareCafe reports Eagle Mountain Mining hosts a team from Japanese firm Nittetsu Mining here in Tucson as they study a possible joint venture at the Oracle Ridge copper project in the Catalina Mountains. That could mean future engineering and support jobs for our region if the deal moves forward next year.

On real estate, local agents say median single family prices hold near four hundred thousand, with days on market just over a month, as buyers look hard at homes near key corridors like Broadway, Grant, and around the University.

Our job market stays tight, with health care, logistics near the airport, and solar installers on the south side all still hiring.

Looking ahead, the Tucson Roadrunners host back to back home games tomorrow and Saturday at the TCC, both starting at seven, with a comedy show lined up after the Friday game, according to the Tucson Sentinel. Arizona Wildcat fans are already talking about the upcoming Holiday Bowl trip to San Diego, as KGUN 9 notes how familiar that city is for many of us.

For schools, education bulletins highlight several Vail teachers being honored as University of Arizona Athletics Teachers of the Year, and TUSD seniors get ready for winter graduation ceremonies across our high school campuses.

Our quick crime and safety note beyond the federal action on Miracle Mile: Tucson Police continue regular patrols around West Speedway, South Sixth Avenue, and along South 12th, with no major overnight incidents reported yet, but we stay alert for updates from TPD later today.

We close with a feel good story on the northwest side, where the first electric school bus rolls out for Flowing Wells students, cutting fumes at morning pickup and giving kids a quieter ride to class.

Thank you for tuning in, and be sure to subscribe so we can keep bringing our community together each morning. This has been Tucson Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for mo
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