Connect with us

Arizona

Arizona governor and lawmakers at odds over disability program cuts

Published

on

Arizona governor and lawmakers at odds over disability program cuts


A peek behind the scenes of the culinary world! Chef Richard Sandoval, the mind behind the revamped ‘Toro’ restaurant in Scottsdale, dishes on preserving and amplifying his family’s recipes around the world! Sandoval opens up about the childhood memories he still carries, which inspire his exquisite plates. Plus, he reveals the fast food chain he’s still a fan of. Then, talking finances ‘In The Chat!’ Yetta Gibson, Simone Cuccurullo, and Vanessa Araiza weigh in on who pays for what when moving in together with a significant other. And, Yetta heads to New York City to meet the first woman to lead one of the city’s most iconic kitchens. Chef Lena Ciardullo reminisces on her time in Arizona and reveals her ultimate goal that has nothing to do with world-class cuisine.



Source link

Arizona

New water rules could put the squeeze on southern Arizona vineyards

Published

on

New water rules could put the squeeze on southern Arizona vineyards


play

  • New groundwater rules in southeastern Arizona threaten to halt the growth of the state’s wine industry.
  • Nearly 80% of Arizona’s wine grapes are grown in the Willcox basin, which is now under strict water management.
  • While vineyards are low water users, they are grouped with high-use farms, raising concerns about future water cuts.

Arizona’s wine industry has seen exponential growth in the past three decades, going from a couple of wine producers in the early 1990s to about 168 today. Now, winemakers, viticulturists and their allies fear that new groundwater rules in southeastern Arizona could stunt that growth.

To make wine, you need wine grapes, and nearly 80% of all the fruit used by Arizona winemakers is grown in the Willcox groundwater basin.

Advertisement

But since December 2024, no new acres of land can be farmed around Willcox due to an “active management area” designation by the Arizona Department of Water Resources. Plans and conservation goals are still in draft but farms will be expected to cut their water use in coming years.

The region has been the center of water controversies: A Midwest-based mega dairy and other outside investors expanded operations in the last decade and drilled deeper wells. Some local wells lost capacity or went dry. And a citizen-ballot measure to create groundwater rules created tension between neighbors.

In Willcox, a majority of residents voted against the regulations, but based on the rate of aquifer depletion and land sinking, the state stepped in a year later.

Willcox vineyards are among the lowest water-users in the area, but they have put all expansion plans on hold.

Advertisement

Jesse Noble, vineyard manager of Merkin Vineyards, planned to grow 40 acres more of wine grapes at the Buhl Memorial farm. His neighbor, Arizona Wine Growers Association President Barbara Pierce, wanted to add 20 acres, and south of her, Zarpara Vineyard hopes future owners can plant the remaining 6 acres.

Like other farmers in the area, they asked the state water agency to grant water rights to their property based on the substantial capital investment they’ve made to farm new ground. The agency will make determinations and begin issuing certificates of water rights sometime in October. Land that doesn’t have a certificate cannot be irrigated.

“A freeze in Willcox ripples across the whole state,” said Lauren King, who is lobbying for the Arizona Wine Growers Association, looking for flexibility on the new rules and a path to growth. They haven’t introduced any legislative proposals yet that would directly address the industry concerns.

The AMA could mean farmers in the southeast corner of the state can’t grow their business, said King, but communities in northern Arizona would feel the impacts, too.

Many Willcox growers send a portion of their grape harvest to wine makers in the Verde Valley and other parts of the state, who then crush, press, ferment, filter and age the fruit to get wine bottles. Those wineries and tasting rooms in turn attract wine tourists who also leave money at local restaurants, hotels, grocery stores and gas stations, spending some $241 million annually. Advocates say there is still much room to grow but there are few places with the right conditions.

Advertisement

Willcox is one of Arizona’s three designated wine-growing regions and the one with the best prospects for growth, considering the threat of hail and frost in Sonoita and the pricey farmland in the Verde Valley. Noble, overseeing grape-growing for Caduceus Cellars’ wine, said that while Merkin Vineyard has five farms in northern Arizona, two-thirds of all their grapes come from southeastern Arizona. They have 67 acres of vineyard in the Willcox basin.

“We can’t expand past that,” said Noble about the effect of the AMA. “More importantly, the industry can’t.”

Pioneers and newcomers

Arizona’s winemaking history spans over two centuries — from settlers’ orchards to pre-prohibition wineries to university research experiments to ventures from modern-day wine pioneers, chronicled by Southwest historian Erik Berg.

The state offered ideal growing conditions for wine grapes, but it wasn’t until the early 1990s when Arizona’s young wine industry had its start.

Advertisement

By the turn of the century, entrepreneurs were experimenting with unique varietals for the Arizona climate, a vineyard-to-bottle college degree was created to support the growing industry, and Arizona-made wines began stalking awards.

Some of the biggest growth came from the number of bonded wineries, facilities authorized to produce wine. There were 10 wine producers at the start of the century and today there are 168, according to government records. The number of wine growers didn’t match that growth. Today some 74 commercial vineyards produce grapes in Arizona.

Willcox, because of its milder winter and available farmland, became the most prolific grape producing region and, by some accounts, the “heart of the state’s wine country.” A report from the University of Arizona shows that nearly 60% of all acres of wine grapes in Arizona are in the basin, now under AMA designation.

There is a varied mix among the wine growers in Cochise County, with wine enthusiasts, entrepreneurs and retirees making the most of it. Most operations across Arizona are 10 acres or fewer in size, but some are as big as 400 acres.

Advertisement

Growing wine grapes in a relatively new viticulture area was “an interesting challenge,” said Noble, who harvested his first vintage in Willcox in 2014 and lived in town for nearly a decade.

The Sulphur Springs Valley, a historical agricultural region with deep, well-drained soils, an abundance of sunshine and few winter frosts, is ideal for many crops, but many wine grape varieties were being tried in that soil and climate for the very first time.

“It was something to figure out,” Noble said. “There wasn’t a recipe, there wasn’t a playbook.”

His neighbors to the east, the family running Bodega Pierce, studied enology and viticulture in California and Washington and worked in wineries all around before purchasing farmland east of the Willcox Playa to start their own vineyard.

“(Arizona) was our best bet to be successful because it was small and growing,” said Barbara Pierce, who runs the taste room and handles administration, finances and marketing. They kept some of the varieties already on the farm, like a pinot noir ill-suited for the high desert climate that they’ve managed to turn productive, and added new ones like Graziano, a Spanish varietal that works great for the area and one that visitors love, Pierce said.

Advertisement

Since the Pierces’ first vintage in 2010, they’ve been experimenting with some 18 varietals of wine grapes and fine-tuned their selection and farming to make wine that resembles the “terroir,” as the French would say, or the unique mix of physical and environmental conditions where and how grapes are grown.

Arizona wine growers would have failed if they simply followed lessons from California, Noble suggested. “Grape vines are very hard to kill but they’re also very hard to make good wine from.”

Today, there are some 400 acres of wine grape crops in the Willcox area — the equivalent of about 363 football fields — yielding 650 tons per year, according to University of Arizona surveys.

Sonoita and the Verde Valley provide the right conditions for wine growing and both have successful vineyards, but the fact that nearly two-thirds of all acres are in Willcox is telling, said Michael Pierce, the winemaker at Bodega Pierce and a commercial horticulture agent with the University of Arizona, who co-authored the UA report.

The Verde Valley has ideal climate but land prices are “prohibitive” and a pending court case makes future water access uncertain, Pierce explained. Sonoita sits at a higher elevation and has more threats of spring and fall frosts. It has some “successful growing locations” in high slopes, but those locations are limited.

Advertisement

The Willcox valley, on the other hand, has an ideal climate and an established agricultural history, he added: “There are axillary components to an ag community that support the wine growers. Everything from agricultural zoning, labor, well/irrigation supplies, tractor repair, etc.”

That kind of agricultural history and infrastructure is not easily found in the other viticulture areas, and new growers would need to make bigger investments.

“I anticipate that we will continue to see small plantings in the Verde Valley,” he added. “But nothing in comparison to the size that is possible in Willcox.”

Different water users, uncertain cuts

By 2000 there were only a couple of vineyards in the Sulphur Springs Valley; now there are over 40.

For a valley with a multi-generational farming and ranching history, wine growers are newcomers, but a decade after them came Riverview, one of the biggest dairy companies in the United States with operations in five states, and other outside investors. Eventually, Riverview became the biggest landowner in the valley.

Advertisement

Groundwater levels in the valley have been dropping for a long time, with ups and downs depending on the farmland expansion and contraction and the dry and wet years. At this point, the prolonged drought and an increase in pumping from agriculture have created a situation that, the water agency concluded, requires active management.

Across the valley, there are cases of wells losing capacity or going dry.

Mark Jorve and Rhona MacMillan moved to the valley, or more specifically the “Willcox Bench” growing region, in 2009. After leaving their corporate work in Phoenix behind, the couple semi-retired and planted the Zarpara Vineyard, which fittingly comes from the Spanish verb for “set sail.”

It didn’t take long before they learned from neighbors that groundwater levels were going down. MacMillan said they started putting money aside. In 2021, their neighbor told them his pump was pulling air and losing capacity.

Advertisement

“We knew that we would have to drill deeper at some point looking at what everyone else was doing,” Jorve said.

In 2022 they drilled a new $120,000 well, 800 feet deep, with their savings and a loan. Just a year later, their old well started pulling dirt and silts, and then the state designated an AMA. Since moving in, water levels in their property went from 320 feet below ground to 420 feet.

“Go find a 10-story building,” Jorve said. “That’s how much water is gone.”

The couple were concerned about the imbalance in the aquifer and saw the regulation as a necessary step forward. They are also concerned about how it will impact small-scale farms and low water users.

“You stopped the wine industry at this point,” said Macmillan of the effect of the AMA. They want to sell Zarpara Vineyards and fully retire but the AMA means the next owner wouldn’t be able to plant the 6 acres still in the property. Like other farmers, they asked for water rights based on “substantial capital investment” but won’t hear from the water agency until the end of the year, when they begin to issue certificates.

Advertisement

Vineyards in the Willcox Bench are neighbors to Coronado Dairy, one of Riverview’s operations. Pierce and Noble told The Republic they haven’t had groundwater issues or seen a big decline in their well’s water levels. Noble has seen a 32 feet decrease in the last decade.

For decades there were no requirements to measure groundwater use or well depth around the Willcox basin, so the state only had consistent data from 52 index wells it monitors regularly. The index well closest to the vineyards, located to the southwest between crop circles of alfalfa, showed a drop of 130 feet between 2010 and 2024. The AMA will require all water users with a well that pumps more than 35 gallons per minute to report their annual water use.

Growing grapes can take as little as the 12 inches of rain the region gets every year. In the high range, wine growers use less than 1.5 acre-feet of water a year per acre, while growing alfalfa with center pivot irrigation takes up to 5 acre-feet per year. An acre-foot of water can supply about 3.5 family homes in Arizona for a year.

One of the criticisms of the AMA regulations is that they cap water rights for each farm at the volume they’ve historically used: The dairy would keep its right to use many acre-feet of water, while farms growing hardy vines or watermelons would be locked in at a low water use. It’s still not clear how future water cuts would be distributed among growers.

Advertisement

Effect of water rules felt miles away

The Arizona Wine Growers Association opposed the creation of an AMA. King, lobbying for the group, said that opposing regulation is far from opposing water conservation.

“Wine growers are really the poster child of water efficiency,” she said, adding the economic return for the water used is also higher than other crops.

The laws governing AMAs were written nearly half a century ago for urban and suburban growing areas, not rural communities, and they didn’t consider some low-water use crops like wine grapes, yucca-like plants or lavender.

Growers are also concerned the water agency could mandate water cuts for growers with perennial crops, like vineyards and tree farms, as they already use highly efficient irrigation. The only way to lower their water use would be to rip plants out.

On Feb. 18, about two dozen wine growers met with Arizona Department of Water Resources staff, ahead of a public agricultural workshop, to present their unique situation and explore flexibility within the AMA law statutes. Growers say the high-value, low-water use crop should be treated differently. Noble said discussions are still “vague.”

Advertisement

The association is not actively running legislation proposals but they have been in conversation with the water agency, the governor’s office and lawmakers, King said.

“What happens as a result of this AMA, and whether or not there is flexibility for wine growers, is going to be critical to the growth of the industry for decades to come,” King said.

“Decisions made today could have direct impact 20-30 years down the line.”

Clara Migoya covers agriculture and water issues for The Arizona Republic and azcentral. Send tips or questions to clara.migoya@arizonarepublic.com.



Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Arizona

NFL mock draft: Arizona Cardinals fill biggest needs in 4-round mock

Published

on

NFL mock draft: Arizona Cardinals fill biggest needs in 4-round mock


The 2026 NFL draft is still more than a month away, and we are beginning to get more multi-round mock drafts. We have a four-round mock draft from NFL.com’s Chad Reuter.

What does that mean for the Arizona Cardinals, who have one pick in each round? In this case, it means hitting their four biggest needs with their first four picks.

Advertisement

Let’s see.

Advertisement

Round 1, pick No. 3: Miami OT Francis Mauigoa

The Cardinals don’t overthink this pick. Mauigoa’s a strong, hard-nosed run blocker who fills a major need in Arizona and should be an NFL starter for a decade.

This pick appears to be destined for one of two routes — a tackle or a pass rusher. The question is whether they value Mauigoa over David Bailey, who goes with the very next pick of this mock draft, or another pass rusher.

The Cardinals have not done anything on the defensive edge this offseason. They have made some minor moves at right tackle.

Round 2, pick No. 34: Clemson EDGE T.J. Parker

If they don’t get a pass rusher in Round 1, it makes sense to go with one in Round 2. Parker looks the part at 6-4, 263 pounds with long 33 1/8-inch arms.

Advertisement

He had 11 sacks and 19.5 tackles for loss in 2024 but saw his production dip to five sacks and 9.5 tackles for loss last season.

Advertisement

Round 3, pick No. 65: LSU QB Garrett Nussmeier

Yes, it makes sense for the Cardinals to draft a quarterback, one they can develop a bit. Nussmeier has the tools but was very inconsistent.

Round 4, pick No. 104: Alabama DT Tim Keenan

The Cardinals have thrown bodies on the defensive line this offseason, signing three and re-signing one. Getting one on Day 3 who is more of a space-eater than playmaker would continue with this trend.

Get more Cardinals and NFL coverage from Cards Wire’s Jess Root and others by listening to the latest on the Rise Up, See Red podcast. Subscribe on Spotify, YouTube or Apple podcasts.

Advertisement

This article originally appeared on Cards Wire: NFL mock draft: Arizona Cardinals fill biggest needs in 4-round mock

Advertisement



Source link

Continue Reading

Arizona

20K fans back bid for pro women’s soccer team at Fiesta Mall site

Published

on

20K fans back bid for pro women’s soccer team at Fiesta Mall site


play

Advertisement
  • A fan initiative to bring a National Women’s Soccer League team to Mesa, Arizona, has gathered nearly 20,000 signatures.
  • Developer Vicki Mayo plans to build a 25,000-seat enclosed soccer stadium at the former Fiesta Mall site, now called the Palo District.
  • The Palo District project also includes a women’s sports wellness campus, an AI venture studio, and two large hotels.

Nearly 20,000 people signed a fan initiative to attract a National Women’s Soccer League team to Mesa’s former Fiesta Mall site, its developer said.

Now known as the Palo District, the 80-acre site along Alma School Road and Southern Avenue is poised for a major transformation that its owner, Vicki Mayo, hopes will be a hub for women’s sports.

Mayo is aiming to attract Arizona’s first National Women’s Soccer League by building a 25,000-seat enclosed soccer stadium that is planned to break ground in the summer.

Her company, Sunny Day Sports, an investment firm, launched an initiative in January called the Founding Fan to showcase that the development would be a “perfect” location for a professional women’s soccer team.

She said the initial goal was to get 10,000 founding fans in 10 days, but exceeded that by reaching over 15,000 signups in that time frame. Now that number is close to 20,000 fans, she said.

Advertisement

The aim is to show the NWSL that metro Phoenix has a fan base and interest to sustain a team.

The 2026 NWSL season launched in March, debuting two new teams and expanding from 14 to 16 teams.

In 2028, two new teams are expected to debut, including the already announced 17th franchise in Atlanta.

NWSL commissioner Jessica Berman, in her 2026 Kickoff Address, stated the 18th team would be awarded later this year, USAToday reported on March 13.  

Advertisement

The league would not “comment on specific markets or pending bids,” said Jennifer Levine, the vice president of public relations and communications for the NWSL.

She said the league was engaging in a “deliberate, rolling expansion process with a number of world-class potential ownership groups as we look toward the future of the league.”

Mayo said she was “not at liberty to disclose” if she’s had conversations with the league to pitch Arizona and the Palo District.

Are professional soccer leagues interested in Arizona?

The state doesn’t have any top-level professional soccer leagues, neither men’s nor women’s teams, but several amateur or minor leagues exist. That includes the Phoenix Rising soccer team in the United Soccer League, a tier below MLS.

Advertisement

The men’s Major League Soccer organization has flirted with the possibility of coming to Arizona for years and most recently hinted it could land in Mesa at a different site. It also appears that the political will to welcome a soccer team is there, as city officials stated in 2024 that it had entertained conversations.

A women’s professional soccer team could see an easier pathway to landing in Arizona and is the focus of the Palo District, according to Mayo.

Several amateur or minor-league women’s soccer clubs have formed over the years. Most recently, the Women’s Premier Soccer League announced a new team would be based at the Peoria Sports Complex. Those teams are created both to build a fan base and to cultivate local talent.

Mayo wants to build on the state’s popularity of youth soccer and keep rising talent in the state.

The Arizona Soccer Association reported that “more than 55,000 boys and girls” are participating in 45-plus clubs throughout the state in 2026.

Advertisement

She said she wants women coming out of those youth programs to have an opportunity to play in Arizona.

“I want these girls that are top tier that want to play pro to be able to stay in their home state and play for their home team,” she said.

Women like Julie Ertz from Mesa, who went on to play in Chicago and Los Angeles. Ertz made 123 appearances with the women’s national team and was in the NWSL between the 2014 and 2023 seasons.

Several other women soccer players with Arizona backgrounds have gone on to play in the NWSL and on the national team.

Mayo said she hopes the planned 25,000-seat “fully enclosed, fully domed” stadium with air conditioning and a retractable grass pitch will be sufficient to attract a professional soccer team.

Advertisement

Details surrounding the financing of the project remained slim. The Mesa City Council in November approved the creation of a theme park district, which will provide a dedicated financing system and a board that will be in charge of that system. It was not immediately known when the board would gather for its first meeting.

What’s planned for the former Fiesta Mall site?

The Palo District is developing with a focus on women’s sports and health.  

It previously announced a women’s sports wellness campus in December as an anchor and “cornerstone” project that will be a $100 million capital investment in partnership with Blue Cross Blue Shield of Arizona.

An AI venture studio, WaveX, backed by LG Electronics, will also be featured at the site.

Two massive hotels with a combined 600 rooms are also planned at the site. The flagship hotel will tie directly into the stadium, which will bring a “VIP” experience, she said. It will be a 4 to 4.5-star property, she said.

Advertisement

“We’re in active conversations with a number of leading hotel chains to see which brand we’re going to solidify on and bring on,” Mayo said.

Like this story? Get more East Valley news straight into your email inbox by signing up for our free weekly East Valley Newsletter, which comes out on Wednesdays.

Is there something under construction you’d like to tell us about or find out more about? Reporter Maritza Dominguez, who covers Mesa, Gilbert and Queen Creek, can be reached at maritza.dominguez@arizonarepublic.com or 480-271-0646. Follow her on X, formerly Twitter: @maritzacdom.





Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Trending