POPULARITY
Sit down with Ali and and dive into what she's seeing on the ground in Pima County Arizona. This episode is geared towards you all sitting on the sidelines. While Ali is specifically talking to what she sees in Tucson, there are lots of similarities in other markets. Hear what's flying off the shelves, what shifts might be coming and heck who knows, maybe even get motivated to go under contract before the end of the year!
Do what you love! We sit down with Dr. Linda Arzoumanian who for 17 years worked as the superintendent of schools for Pima County - Arizona's second most populist county. Dr. Linda talks about transitioning from educational boardroom to doing something she loves! And to our delight, we recorded this episode on Zoom while being supported by a dozen of her dear friends/colleagues. If a change in career or retirement has been looming about for you, check out this sweet episode and share your thoughts with us at info@ boomtalkmedia.com Cheers!
We Are The News Now w/ Dan Hennen on EA Truth Radio: Pete Buttigieg - Maya Angelique - Sir David Amess - Rachel Levine and MoreThis is Dan's LIVE show from Monday, October 25, 2021. Thank you for tuning in & showing your support! Our Hosts' viewpoints don't always reflect what EA TRUTH Media believes as a whole!Please join us chatting on social media about our shows using hashtag #EATruthRadio Dan provides commentary and analysis on the past week's “news” stories. And strips out the Fake News so you don't have to.Topics this week: US Navy, Alec Baldwin, Andrew McCabe, American Airlines, Election Audit in Michigan? Post Office Shooting in Tennessee, Container Ships, Pima County Arizona, Jussie Smollett, Maya Angelique, Johnson & Johnson, Pete Buttigieg, Sir David Amess, Rachel Levine, and the death of Texas Roadhouse CEO.*** Visit our Media Site at www.EternalAffairsMedia.com & Please Consider Planting A SEED IN OUR MINISTRY! Sign up and become a Monthly Patron for EXCLUSIVE PERKS ...*** NEW *** TRUTH PREMIUM on EA Truth Media Website ~ Exclusive Premium Content & Less AdsSupport us and receive these amazing benefits for ONLY 0.99 cents per month ~ Click Here! You can also send Bitcoin to: 3MrcjvjkVUyP5dDmELDZkqD5JT5TTYyQHnTHE TRUTH SHALL PREVAIL ~ WE ARE THE STORM! Our Independent Media Operation & End Times Ministry has been online for nearly 12 years now since Curtis "Ray Biselliano" Bizelli FOUNDED EternalAffairsMedia.com in 2010 as an alternative to mainstream mockingbird fake news propaganda media! We have since morphed into a partial end times prophetic ministry!!!! We are on the frontlines leading the fight against the Fake News Mockingbird Media! Check out our Online Store and get some COOL GEAR! If there is anything you'd like to see that isn't there, message us! We wish to hear from you! The SILENT MAJORITY isn't going back to sleep! Corrupt, Sleepy, Pedo Joe & The Hoe STOLE this election! He will NEVER be our President! He's an enemy to the People! People are waking up! This is THE GREAT AWAKENING! God bless you & your loved ones! GOD BLESS THE REPUBLIC OF AMERICA! Support the show (https://donate.eamedia.online)
Pima County owns and leases large tracts of land for working landscapes and biological conservation. Vanessa Prileson manages the range program which ensures this arrangement is successful and has good advice for other organizations selecting lessees/operators who need to be able to manage toward conservation goals and as well as economic and production goals. Sonoran Desert Conservation Plan. https://webcms.pima.gov/cms/one.aspx?portalId=169&pageId=52654 TRANSCRIPT: https://bit.ly/3AHjH6l
Gabriella Cázares-Kelly got her start as an organizer and educator, struggling to get Indigenous communities registered to vote. Learn more about how that experience shaped her journey to becoming the Pima County Recorder, who manages (among other things), the voter registration process, how far her family has come in just three generations, and the burden and privilege of being the first to represent her community in elected office. Produced by Dear Media.
Thanks to Aunt Sadie and the passing on of family heirlooms, Julie Adamcin has learned many stories about her ancestors. In today’s episode she shares the story behind bullet holes in a marble top table and the ancestor who lived in Missouri and voted for Abraham Lincoln in 1860. Julie also shares how finding a newspaper article about her grandfather’s death helped her better understand the experiences of her mother’s family.In this episode Julie shares:The story of the Camp family silver [3:15]Mahlon Ashbrook, voting for Lincoln, and the oak and marble table [7:49]How her perspective of her grandfather’s death changed after finding a newspaper article [17:07]The benefits she’s gotten from researching her family history [21:05]About Julie:Julie Camp Adamcin has been doing family research since she was in high school. Julie received a Ph.D. in Education and worked for nearly 40 years as a 4-H in Pima County Arizona. After her retirement in 2007, she has been able to connect with other family members who share her interests. Also Mentioned:Mahlon Ashbrook's obituary at Newspapers.com (affiliate link - no subscription needed to view clipping)Click here to go to the website and see a photograph of one of Julie's cousin's family history quilts.Episode Sponsor:Episode sponsored by Heather Murphy's signature 1:1 service, Stories in Your Roots. Get a free guide, "7 Ways You (Unintentionally) Sabotage Your Family Tree" and have more success as you research your family history.
"Indigenous Woman Coming Through!" - Gabriella Cázares-KellyFollow us!Instagram: @LocalSelectionPodcastTwitter: @LocalSelectionGabriella Cázares-Kelly, candidate for Pima County Recorder, ArizonaTwitter: @gabriella_forInstagram: @gabriellaforrecorder(you should totally follow her, she is active and endearing)IntroThere are few crimes I have more disdain for than voter suppression.I can think of but one reason to deny people their voice in government -So that you can exploit them to enrich yourself.In this intro I introduce my thesis that the only reasonable goal regarding the franchise is:100% voter registration, 100% voter participation.If you are shooting for anything shy of that, you have to ask yourself who are you leaving out and why are you afraid to admit their voice into the process.InterviewGabriella talks about the structural barriers erected to prevent Indigenous folks from voting in this country, and how she plans to use the office of County Recorder to tear down those barriers in places like the Tohono O'odham Nation where she grew up.She offers perspective about the inequities exacerbated in the COVID pandemic in places like Navajo Nation.She talks about the way local budgets can spell life and death for people in Pima County in ways you may never imagine unless you lived there.She offers advice for people who want to build diversity (hint - be intentional and be ready to pay for people's expertise and labor!)And she has some beautiful words to help us keep changing the landscape even if every seed we plant doesn't become a tree.
What are the critical components of a successful workforce development program? The Family Engagement Network (FEN), located in Pima County Arizona, is leading the way in a holistic and family-centered approach to supporting caregivers and their families to empower themselves through the opportunity to build critical workforce skills. In our 11th episode, we hear from Lorena, a parent champion in the workforce program, who shares her experience in the program. We then learn from FEN members, Heather, Tamara, and Pam, who discuss the importance of centering families and how they navigate the needs and desires of families as a unit to improve how the network serves its community. Guests include:Lorena Robles, Parent Champion, Family Engagement Network Heather Friedman, Pima North Regional Director, First Things First Tamara Nicolosi, Director of Business Development and Engagement, Pima Community College Pam Valencia, Workforce Enrollment Specialist, Pima County Arizona at Work Host: Ronda Alexander, Director of Operations, Vital Village NetworkProduced by: Networks of Opportunity for Child WellbeingMusic By: Morgan BrelandEdited by: Camila Beiner
Laura Conover who is running for County Attorney in Pima County Arizona, home of Tuscon. According to her bio, she “dedicated her career to helping the Southern Arizona community by defending the poor, advocating for victims, and fighting for justice in local and federal courts. She decided to run for the position of Pima County Attorney to bring much-needed reform to Southern Arizona’s criminal justice system.” She is facing two candidates from the County Attorney's Office.
Coroner Talk™ | Death Investigation Training | Police and Law Enforcement
Postmortem fingerprint collection is a routine part of many forensic death investigations. Although the production of postmortem prints is usually straight forward, several obstacles and scenarios can make the collection difficult. A common challenge occurs when finger pads are mummified. Several current techniques allow for softening and rehydration of mummified finger pads; however, despite the employment of such techniques, the production of adequate postmortem fingerprints can remain difficult. The Pima County Office of the Medical Examiner has earned national recognition for breakthrough work with fingerprinting unidentified bodies of people, including border crossers, who have died in the desert. In arid conditions such as Southern Arizona’s desert, it doesn't take long to run out of water. This, as well as sickness, injuries and other accidents, can lead to fatalities and the dehydration process doesn’t stop after death. Many of the bodies brought to the PCOME’s well lit, tiled hallways have begun to mummify. When nobody knows who the person was, mummification makes identification an even greater challenge. It's possible to rehydrate the tissue using sodium hydroxide. The process can take up to 72 hours and requires a mixture of attention and patience. If printing is attempted too soon, the prints are still distorted — but waiting too long can mean permanently losing the fingerprints. “The risk again is always you can dissolve the tissue if your solution's the wrong concentration or you leave the tissue in the solution for too long and that kind of thing,” Hess said. “So we have a fairly rigid process.” It was a process that Hernandez began helping to develop after he started working at the PCOME in 2000. This article was an excerpt from a full article by the Tucson Sentinel January 2014, read the full article HERE To hear the full story with Gene Hernandez with Pima County Arizona on how this process works listen to this episode.
Sherry Graham - Potter talks about how her husband was killed in the line of duty, how she was notified and all that encompasses the departmental funeral. She discusses the emotional hardship that she and her two sons endured. Sherry elaborates on how a chance encounter with another law enforcement officer widow, helped her through the grieving process, to find their new normal. She also discusses her life today and how she dedicates much of her time to help family members of fallen law enforcement officers through her work with Concerns Of Police Officers (C.O.P.S.). Background song Hurricane is used with permission from the band Dark Horse Flyer.