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Tucson Local Pulse: Missing Woman Search Intensifies, Desert Conservation Celebrated

Tucson Local Pulse: Missing Woman Search Intensifies, Desert Conservation Celebrated

Published 1 month, 2 weeks ago
Description
Good morning, this is Tucson Local Pulse for Thursday, March 12. We start with breaking news on the search for 84-year-old Nancy Guthrie from her Catalina Foothills home. Day 39 brings fresh urgency as Pima County Sheriffs and the FBI analyze a suspects wrist tattoo, described as black and gray work common in the Southwest, possibly linked to gangs. They have received over 2400 tips through 88-CRIME, with more than a million dollars in rewards offered. An urgent call goes out to our listeners, especially near the Foothills, submit any Ring, Nest, or security footage from early February via the new Pima County evidence portal, no matter how small. Investigators stress every clip counts for bringing Nancy home safely.

Shifting to City Hall, Pima County celebrates 25 years of the Sonoran Desert Conservation Plan this year, with events protecting our deserts, ranches, and habitats around landmarks like Historic Canoa Ranch at 5375 South I-19 Frontage Road in Green Valley. It balances growth and nature, impacting our daily air, water, and trails.

Weather today features mild sunshine with highs near 72 degrees and light winds, perfect for outdoor plans, though evening clouds may bring a stray shower. Outlook stays pleasant through the weekend.

In new business, HomeGoods gears up for a TJX Rewards early shopping event March 20 to 22 at local stores, drawing crowds for home decor deals.

Sports note, Irans national soccer team pulls out of World Cup training planned here due to global tensions, leaving our community in limbo but opening spots for other teams.

Upcoming, join the 4th Annual First Responders Public Safety Fair Saturday at Historic Canoa Ranch, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., with demos and family fun. Nature Fest leaps into spring March 21 at Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum.

Local schools shine with Palo Verde Bloomfest prep at Kino South Sports Complex on Tournament Way, highlighting student art.

Jobs look steady with about 15,000 openings posted locally last week, many in healthcare and tourism. Real estate sees median home prices around 350,000 dollars, up 5 percent, favoring buyers near Speedway Boulevard.

A feel-good story, volunteers restored trails at El Rio Preserve, fostering community bonds amid our blooming desert.

Thanks for tuning in, listeners, and subscribe for daily updates. This has been Tucson Local Pulse. Well see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

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