Tucson Local Pulse
Good morning, this is Tucson Local Pulse for Saturday, June thirteenth, twenty twenty six. We wake up to another hot start across our city. Forecasters at KGUN 9 say we top out right around one hundred and one to one hundred and two this afternoon, with warm overnight lows in the upper seventies and just a slight chance of a stray shower to our south and east. That heat means we plan our day around shade, water, and early mornings, especially if we are heading out along the Rillito or up to Sabino Canyon. The National Weather Service also reminds us that monsoon season officially kicks off Monday, so we stay alert for dust storms and sudden downpours later this month. From City Hall, Tucson officials continue to focus on water security and heat preparedness. Tucson Water is moving ahead with conservation and reclaimed water projects that affect what comes out of our taps and how much we pay, while the city’s summer cooling centers remain open near downtown, on Grant, and along South Sixth to give our neighbors without reliable AC a safe place to cool down. In business news, the local real estate market stays tight. According to regional listing services, the median home price in the metro area sits around three hundred eighty thousand dollars, with typical three bedroom homes on the south and west sides, like those off Valencia and Twelve Avenue, drawing multiple offers when they are priced under three fifty. On the jobs front, hospitality and health care continue to hire, with several resorts in the Foothills and major hospitals near Grant and Campbell posting dozens of openings for the summer and fall. We also have new things to do. Coronado National Forest is marking National Get Outdoors Day with fee free access to standard day use areas today, a nice excuse to get up Mount Lemmon early before the heat builds. Around town, our June calendar is full of culture, with Juneteenth art and music celebrations, live sets downtown on Congress, and family events at Tucson Mall, including card game meetups and pet adoption events. On the schools side, Tucson Unified and Sunnyside students are in summer mode, but local club teams keep competing; several youth soccer and baseball squads representing our high schools are in weekend tournaments across the city, bringing a little school spirit into the off season. Our feel good note this morning comes from neighborhood groups along Fourth Avenue and in the Barrio Viejo area, where volunteers are handing out water, hats, and sunscreen to unsheltered neighbors, a reminder that we look out for one another when the heat cranks up. Police and sheriff’s reports overnight point to a relatively quiet stretch, with a couple of traffic crashes on I-10 near the Miracle Mile exit and a reported armed robbery under investigation on the south side. Officers say there is no broader threat to the public, but they ask that we stay aware of our surroundings, lock our cars, and avoid leaving valuables visible, especially around shopping centers. That is our snapshot of Tucson this morning. Thank you for tuning in, and please remember to subscribe so you never miss our daily check in with the city we share. This has been Tucson Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
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