Tucson Local Pulse

Tucson Local Pulse: Heat Wave Prep and Summer Season Kicks Off

3 min · 13 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Tucson Local Pulse: Heat Wave Prep and Summer Season Kicks Off

Descripción

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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Portada del episodio Tucson Local Pulse: Heat Wave Prep and Summer Season Kicks Off

Tucson Local Pulse: Heat Wave Prep and Summer Season Kicks Off

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

13 de jun de 20263 min
Portada del episodio Tucson Local Pulse: Court Updates, Transit Concerns, and Weekend Heat

Tucson Local Pulse: Court Updates, Transit Concerns, and Weekend Heat

Good morning, this is Tucson Local Pulse for Friday, June 12, 2026. We start with a major court development affecting our community. Federal prosecutors in Arizona report that a 31 year old Tucson man, Shams Khan Rehman, has just pleaded guilty to two counts of production of child pornography. According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, he admitted using Snapchat and paying people to exploit several minors under 12. Sentencing is set for early September in U.S. District Court here in Tucson. We share this so we stay aware of how important online safety is for our kids. From the courts to city hall, we are watching our buses. KJZZ reports that a potential Sun Tran and Sun Link bus strike is looming as our city council talks about new transit investments and safety improvements. Drivers have raised concerns after recent violent incidents on buses, and we could see service disruptions if an agreement is not reached. For those of us who rely on routes along Speedway, Broadway, and Oracle, it is a good day to check schedules and have a backup plan. On to the weather. KGUN 9 forecasts that we are heading for a hot, partly cloudy day, with highs around 103 and lows near 80. The heat will be intense by early afternoon, so if we are hiking near Sabino Canyon, working outdoors, or going to Reid Park, we should plan shade, water, and earlier hours. The weekend stays in the low 100s, with just a slight chance of storms building early next week. In business and jobs, local recruiters say hospitality and healthcare continue to lead the hiring push, with an estimated few hundred openings across the Tucson area, especially near Banner University Medical Center and along Grant and Campbell. In real estate, agents report that the median home price in the metro area hovers around the mid 300 thousands, with homes near the University of Arizona and along River Road still moving quickly, often within a few weeks. For community events, Park Place Mall is hosting a World Soccer Party today from 4 to 6 p.m., a family event with a kids club theme. Tomorrow, the mall follows with Dads, Vibes, and Rides, a car focused celebration just in time for Father’s Day weekend. Downtown, we have live music expected on Congress Street and at venues near the Rialto and Fox theatres, so parking along Congress and Stone may be tight this evening. In sports, local high school summer leagues continue, and our student athletes are staying busy in basketball and baseball camps around Tucson High and Pueblo High. On the inspirational side, a Tucson based athlete is preparing to compete in the 2026 Warrior Games, highlighted this week on Tucson Now, showing how adaptive sports and community support help wounded service members push forward. For crime and safety in the last 24 hours, Tucson Police continue to emphasize extra patrols near major transit corridors and busy shopping areas. Officials are asking us to stay alert, lock vehicles, and report suspicious activity, especially around midtown and the south side. We balance this by noting how many neighbors are stepping up with neighborhood watches and mutual aid groups, quietly making our streets feel a bit safer. Thank you for tuning in and spending part of your morning with us. Remember to subscribe so you never miss a local update. 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

Ayer3 min
Portada del episodio Tucson Heat Peaks at 102: Fiber Expansion, Trader Joe's Opens, World Cup Watch Parties Begin

Tucson Heat Peaks at 102: Fiber Expansion, Trader Joe's Opens, World Cup Watch Parties Begin

Good morning, this is Tucson Local Pulse for Thursday, June 11. We start with the heat, because it shapes everything today. Tucson is headed for a very hot afternoon near 102, with mostly sunny skies and only a small chance of rain, so outdoor plans around the University of Arizona, downtown, and the foothills need extra water and shade breaks. KGUN 9 shows the next few days staying hot too, with highs around 101 or 102 through the weekend. Around town, city business is moving on growth and fiber. In nearby Oro Valley, council and boards are expected at a Ripple Fiber groundbreaking this morning, a sign that more broadband buildout is moving ahead in the metro area. That matters for daily life, from remote work to school access. On the local business front, Trader Joe’s in Tucson is now open, adding another busy stop for shoppers on the north side. And for a fresh sign of seasonal activity, Corbett’s, Kintoki, and Borderlands Sam Hughes are all lining up World Cup watch plans starting today, giving sports fans a new reason to gather across the city. Tucson.com also says the weekend calendar is filling fast, with Pride markets, Pop Punk Prom at Hotel Congress, pool parties, and laser shows. For jobs and the broader economy, Tucson is still seeing service and hospitality demand tied to summer events and tourism, while the new opening at Trader Joe’s adds hiring momentum. In real estate, the bigger story remains steady demand for homes in popular neighborhoods close to the University, downtown, and the streetcar corridor, where location continues to drive interest. In sports, Arizona track and field has a bright note this morning. Mason Lawyer advances to the men’s 100 and 200 meter finals at the NCAA championships, giving Wildcat fans something positive to follow. The championship mile downtown also continues to be one of Tucson’s signature fitness events, blending competition with a street party feel. For community life, today also brings a citizenship ceremony at Chamizal National Memorial, a meaningful moment that adds to the city’s civic spirit. And this weekend, Tucson Juneteenth events continue building toward Saturday’s celebration. On public safety, we are not seeing a major Tucson breaking crime alert in the latest available reports, but the heat and heavy traffic mean we are still watching for crashes, thefts, and neighborhood calls for service across the city. Thanks for tuning in and please subscribe. 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

11 de jun de 20262 min
Portada del episodio Tucson Local Pulse: Heat, Safety Updates, and Community Cleanups This Sunday

Tucson Local Pulse: Heat, Safety Updates, and Community Cleanups This Sunday

Good morning, this is Tucson Local Pulse for Sunday, June 7, 2026. We wake up today with a mix of sunshine and early heat on the way. Forecasts call for highs in the upper nineties across midtown and downtown, with a few clouds building over the Catalinas this afternoon. We stay dry, so our outdoor plans are good to go, but we should all take it easy on hikes in Sabino Canyon and along the Loop after lunchtime. Overnight, we cool back into the seventies. From city hall, Tucson officials move forward with water and street priorities. The mayor and council continue to highlight investments in fixing potholes along East Speedway and South Sixth Avenue, and they keep pushing conservation as Colorado River restrictions hang over our long term supply. We are reminded to keep an eye out for construction crews and slower traffic near Grant and Oracle as resurfacing work continues. On the breaking news and safety front, Tucson police report several serious crashes overnight on I 10 near the Miracle Mile exit and on East Broadway near Swan. Officers also investigate a pair of armed robberies at convenience stores on South Sixth and West Irvington. No fatalities are reported as of this morning, and detectives say there is no indication the two robberies are connected. Police ask anyone with information or home security video in those areas to contact 88 Crime. We also see an increased DUI patrol presence around Fourth Avenue and downtown, so we plan rides before heading out tonight. In business news, our job market stays tight but resilient. Local observers say the metro unemployment rate sits near four percent, with health care, logistics near the airport, and hospitality along North Oracle and downtown leading new postings. Warehouse and driver jobs around the Port of Tucson see dozens of openings, while major employers like Raytheon continue hiring engineers and technicians. Real estate agents around the Foothills and Rita Ranch report that the median home price hovers in the mid three hundreds, with homes under three hundred thousand still moving quickly on the south and west sides. Renters see average apartment prices around thirteen hundred dollars a month, pushing many families to look farther out toward Marana and Vail. For culture and music, our weekend calendar is packed. The Rialto Theatre downtown hosts touring acts tonight, and Club Congress keeps the local scene going with indie bands and DJs. Songkick lists hundreds of shows booked across Tucson this year, from metal at 191 Toole to jazz in small bars around Fourth Avenue. For families, Pima County promotes Sunday Funday this afternoon at the Northwest YMCA Thad Terry Pool on North Shannon Road, with free open swim and activities. The Town of Marana offers basketball skills and drills today at the Marana Aquatic and Recreation Center on North Marana Main Street for kids five to thirteen. Our schools also give us reasons to smile. Several Tucson Unified and Sunnyside district students recently bring home state medals in track and robotics, and high school summer programs are already underway at Pima Community College campuses across town. We close with one feel good story. Volunteers gather near Reid Park and along the Santa Cruz River section of the Loop for weekend cleanups, filling bags with trash and planting native desert species. Neighbors say it makes our paths safer and more welcoming for sunrise walkers and cyclists. Thank you for tuning in to Tucson Local Pulse, and please remember to subscribe so we can keep sharing what matters in our community. 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

7 de jun de 20263 min
Portada del episodio Tucson Local Pulse: Housing Growth, Summer Heat, and Community Rain Gardens

Tucson Local Pulse: Housing Growth, Summer Heat, and Community Rain Gardens

Good morning, this is Tucson Local Pulse for Saturday, June sixth. We start today with a look at city decisions shaping our neighborhoods. At this weeks Zoning Examiner meeting, shared by the City of Tucson Planning and Development Services, we see continued debate over higher density housing near major corridors like Broadway and Grant. These decisions affect how we manage traffic, parking, and our long term growth, and we will be watching closely as recommendations move to mayor and council in the coming weeks. On the housing front, KB Home announces the opening of the Reserve at Bella Tierra, a new master planned community in east Tucson, with model homes now open for tours. The builder highlights on site amenities and proximity to local schools and parks, adding more options in a market where typical list prices for single family homes are now hovering in the mid three hundreds, according to regional real estate trackers. In our job market, local hiring boards show steady postings in health care, construction, and hospitality, especially around downtown, the University of Arizona area, and along Oracle Road. Entry roles are commonly starting in the mid teens per hour, with specialized positions in nursing, skilled trades, and tech support reaching into the mid twenties and beyond. Weather wise, we stay hot and dry today. Forecasts from the National Weather Service in Tucson call for highs near the upper nineties to around one hundred, plenty of sun, and only a slight hint of clouds building over the Catalinas this afternoon. That means we need extra water, shade, and sunscreen if we are heading to events or trails, especially around Sabino Canyon and A Mountain. Overnight lows dip into the seventies, and the next few days look similar, with the real monsoon moisture still holding off. For community events, Pima County highlights the Vegan Tucson Night Market at Rillito Park tonight from six to ten, alongside the Heirloom Farmers Market. Tomorrow, families can head downtown to the Fox Tucson Theatre for the free Monsoon Literacy Celebration, with hands on reading activities and free books for kids. The Rotary Club of Tucson continues its weekly lunch meetings at the Tucson Convention Center on South Church Avenue, a place where we often see updates on local service projects and business networking. In sports, Arizona Daily Star coverage notes local high school summer leagues and club teams now in full swing, with Tucson athletes training on fields across town as they gear up for fall seasons. On the pro side, Tucson sports outlets recap regional baseball and soccer tournaments drawing visitors to Kino Sports Complex and Hi Corbett Field. Our feel good story today comes from a Tucson community group featured by The Cool Down, showing how neighbors are turning simple backyard rain basins into mini rain gardens. By shaping small depressions in the yard and planting native species, they capture storm runoff and reduce stress on city drains, proving that even a single yard near Speedway or Valencia can help the whole block. On the crime front, Tucson Police and Pima County Sheriff reports from the past day point to several property crimes and a few serious incidents, including vehicle break ins near major shopping areas. Officers remind us to lock cars, remove valuables from view, and report suspicious activity quickly. Law enforcement continues targeted patrols near busy intersections and late night corridors, with a focus on deescalation and community contact. As we wrap up, we remember that our daily choices shape Tucson, from how we drive and shop to how we show up for neighbors and events. Thank you for tuning in, and dont forget to subscribe so we can keep bringing you what matters here at home. 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

6 de jun de 20263 min