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Sedona
Saturday, February 22, 2025

Sedona rallies against the city

Sedona seems to be on the brink of a revolution — or maybe more appropriately, its Latin root “revolutio,” a turnaround. Although far from a revolution, public outcry against a recent Sedona City Council decision, complaints against local governments’...

Dunn: No mojave here

Few are the people living in Sedona who haven’t heard horror stories about someone bitten by a Mojave rattlesnake and coming close to dying from its highly toxic venom. By Susan Johnson Larson Newspapers Few...

Tension on City Council?

It’s hard to get an interview with Sedona’s new Councilwoman Pud Colquitt. It’s not because she’s unwilling to talk or because of her hectic schedule tending to horses. It’s because once Colquitt came back to City...

Workers resign as spit flies at the ‘Y’

Construction at the ‘Y’ roundabout is stirring up more than dust and concrete. Standing in the middle of intersections, flaggers are an open target to drive-by insults, profanity and  spitting. Some flaggers have...

Sluggish economy troubles Fitch

The deal hasn’t closed, and the plan for the former Sedona Cultural Park changed. The reason, a bad United States economy. “There’s a whole problem with our economy right now,” Monty Fitch,...

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Show time: Sedona film festival draws near

The 31st annual Sedona International Film Festival will run from Saturday, Feb. 22, through Sunday, March 2, offering more...

City to buy West Sedona lot, sell 401 Jordan

The Sedona City Council is flipping properties quicker than a short-order cook in a Clarkdale mining camp hurling flapjacks....
Larson Newspapers