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Tucson eyes conversion of landfill to sustainability campus

Tucson eyes conversion of landfill to sustainability campus NICOLE LUDDEN, Arizona Daily Star July 13, 2021 FacebookTwitterEmail TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) Tucson’s Los Reales Landfill has a new name, but the change is only the first step in an effort to completely restructure the facility into an environmentally conscious resource. The Tucson City Council voted unanimously July 7 to rename the landfill to “Los Reales Sustainability Campus” as the facility takes on the goal of achieving zero waste. The move supports the council s 2020 climate emergency declaration which committed Tucson to become a zero waste city by 2050 and reach carbon neutrality by 2030. “We have been really trying to look at the Los Reales Landfill as a space for innovation and sustainability,” Mayor Regina Romero said. “In order to become a zero waste city, we really have to reimagine and think about our landfill in a different way.”

Changes at Los Reales to reflect city sustainability efforts

The Los Reales Landfill is getting a new name—and a new mission. Tucson Mayor Regina Romero and the Tucson City Council voted this week to rename the Los Reales Landfill as the Los Reales Sustainability Campus. It is part of a larger planning effort to achieve waste reduction goals established by City Council in a Climate Emergency Declaration. The declaration committed the City of Tucson to reach carbon neutrality by 2030 and to become a zero-waste city by 2050, with an intermediate 50% diversion goal by 2030. The city currently spends more than $8 million per year at Los Reales for waste processing and disposal operations. 

Deadly street racing outruns efforts to combat it

Deadly street racing outruns efforts to combat it
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Tucson, other Arizona cities struggle to halt deadly street racing

Scottsdale Police Department PHOENIX – Ramon Angel Carrasco and his girlfriend were driving home from a Scottsdale bakery in a white BMW in August 2019 when Robert J. Foster pulled up next to them in a light blue Lamborghini. According to a witness account provided to police, Carrasco and Foster revved their engines at a red light on Hayden Road before heading north, and within seconds they were traveling more than 100 mph. Meanwhile, Cynthia Ann Fisher was driving south on the same stretch of Hayden. The 68-year-old hairdresser had just left the grocery store and was planning to make breakfast the next morning for a new roommate, said Leah Stenzel, her friend and boss.

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