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Wednesday, April 2, 2025

Tim Perry

Sedona police forecast arrests to rise 21 percent in 2023

The Sedona Police Department is forecasting that it will make 21% more arrests and issue 44% more citations in fiscal year 2023 than it did in 2022, according to the city’s latest budget. However, making that calculation is complicated...

Court clears water tank for construction

After nearly six years of planning, staff reviews, public hearings and litigation, the Arizona Water Co. has been cleared to proceed with its plans for installing a 1.5-million-gallon water tank and pumping station off State Route 179. The Project...

Yavapai County sued for open meeting violation

Yavapai County is being sued by a group of property owners southwest of Sedona who are arguing that the county’s 2020 land use settlement agreement with the Global Community Communications Alliance, which operates the Camp Avalon nature retreat off...

City traffic officials address transit objectives, announce microtransit will be free to and from Park & Rides

The city of Sedona held a virtual “listening and learning” session on topics related to the Sedona in Motion program on Dec. 7, during which city staff responded to public questions and concerns about circulation in Sedona. Approximately 49...

Sedonans shuttle toys to local kids in need

The city of Sedona’s first holiday “Stuff the Bus” event, which took place at Posse Grounds Park on Tuesday, Dec. 6, in collaboration with Toys with Tots, turned out to exceed its organizers’ expectations. “The goal is to fill...

Yavapai County closes Desert Flour Bakery in VOC

After 29 years in business, the Desert Flour Bakery in the Village of Oak Creek was closed down by the Yavapai County Environmental Health Unit on Wednesday, Nov. 30, for violations of the county health code. “We had all...

Local businesses weigh in on tourism decline

The Sedona Chamber of Commerce and city of Sedona staff are forecasting a decline in tourism that the chamber expects will continue into 2024. Members of Sedona City Council have expressed confidence that tourism — and its dependent sales...

Sedona acquires 41 acres plus $10M in debt with Cultural Park purchase

The Sedona City Council voted unanimously to approve the purchase of the Sedona Cultural Park and to issue $10.2 million worth of excise tax bonds to pay for part of the purchase at its meeting on Nov. 22. Discussion...

City council remains optimistic as tourism and revenue fall

The latest figures from the city of Sedona and the Sedona Chamber of Commerce suggest that the post-pandemic economic boom has ended and that tourism will decline steadily into 2024. “The growth levels we were seeing are not expected...

Sedona not scheduled to get high-speed internet boost anytime soon

Cornville and Rimrock are on track to receive upgraded broadband internet access by October 2023 — but Sedona, Cottonwood and Camp Verde are not. As part of the Yavapai County Broadband Initiative, the county has committed $20 million in...

About Me

Tim Perry grew up in Colorado and Montana and studied history at the University of North Dakota and the University of Hawaii before finding his way to Sedona. He is the author of eight novels and two nonfiction books in genres including science fiction, alternate history, contemporary fantasy, and biography. An avid hiker and traveler, he has lived on a sailboat in Florida, flown airplanes in the Rocky Mountains, and competed in showjumping and three-day eventing. He is currently at work on a new book exploring the relationships between human biochemistry and the evolution of cultural traits.
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