These Images Define The Pandemic For Tucson Photojournalist kjzz.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from kjzz.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
A young Tucson family fell behind on bills after dad fell off the roof and broke his back and their premature baby spent a month in intensive care.
A grandmother struggling to stretch her fixed monthly income after her daughter died, leaving behind an 11-year-old granddaughter to raise.
A single dad working to overcome physical disabilities while raising two sons.
Those are just some real-life examples of local residents who have been helped by Tucson Electric Powerâs Help With Emergency Energy Relief Operation (HEERO) program, which allows TEP ratepayers to contribute directly through their bills to help their less fortunate neighbors pay their power bills.
Judge hears arguments over whether to nix voter-approved education tax on richest Arizonans tucson.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from tucson.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Customers of Tucson Electric Power Co. will see their monthly home bills rise by an average of just over $5 per month, or about 6%, while business customers will see a decrease starting with the new year, after state regulators approved new rates for the utility late Tuesday.
The Arizona Corporation Commission rejected proposals to delay the rate increase to ease customersâ financial burden during the COVID-19 pandemic.
But more TEP customers will qualify for the companyâs low-income discount rates as the utility panel voted to increase the income threshold for such programs.
The 15 cities that spend the most on utilities.
Future residents of the apartment complex under construction at the former Benedictine Monastery will have an on-site restaurant, local coffee shop, gym and business neighbors.
Fitness studio F45 has leased about 2,900 square feet in the new retail strip on the west end of the development at 800 N. Country Club Road.
Debbie Heslop and Leah Bogen, with Volk Co., negotiated the lease.
âIn addition to F45 Fitness, we are in discussions with restaurant groups and a local coffee roaster,â owner Ross Rulney said.
Along with a restaurant in the new retail strip, Rulney expects to announce a restaurant inside the historic monastery.