Arizona
BioProcure opens temporary office in Chandler, plans permanent Arizona location in 2023 – KTAR.com

PHOENIX — A Massachusetts-based firm has opened a short lived workplace in Chandler and plans to ascertain a everlasting location in Arizona by subsequent yr, the town introduced Tuesday.
BioProcure, which supplies procurement, accounts payable and administrative help providers for biotech firms, started operations at Workpliciti close to Queen Creek and Dobson roads this week.
“Chandler’s business-friendly setting and well-protected employment corridors proceed to place us on the shortlist for firms trying to broaden their headcount,” Mayor Kevin Hartke stated in a press launch.
“It’s thrilling to see an organization supporting the nation’s whole biosciences trade choose Worth Hall.”
The corporate plans to rent 35 workers inside the first yr and 150 inside three years. Positions on the Chandler workplace embrace procurement, operations and administration positions.
“Our objective was to ascertain a presence within the southwest to higher serve our shoppers within the Western time zones, however equally necessary to us was that our new workplace be positioned in a vibrant, up-and-coming metropolis with a thriving science and know-how sector,” Vincent Bologna, co-founder and CEO of BioProcure, stated in a press launch.
“Chandler, Arizona, was the right match.”

Arizona
This is what bus safety looks like in southern Arizona
TUCSON, Ariz. (13 News) – The focus on safety on school buses is reaching new heights following a crash on Interstate 10 Tuesday that injured dozens of kids and staff.
However, local safety administrators are pumping the brakes on concerns over school bus safety in southern Arizona.
“A school bus is the safest means of transportation for our students and passengers,” said Teresa Ramirez, the southern Arizona board member for the Transportation Administrators of Arizona.
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Statistically, it is safer for children to travel on a bus than a car, with an average of six student deaths per year to 2,000 in a car, according to the National Transportation Safety Board.
However, to analyze what safety standards are in place for buses in southern Arizona, administrators have to look at each district individually.
“Every district has the opportunity to design a fleet that is specifically for the needs of that district,” Ramirez said.
A district like the Tucson Unified, which has the largest number of bus users in southern Arizona, requires larger buses.
It can be limiting for safety features like seatbelts compared to smaller districts in rural communities that can use smaller buses or caravans with seatbelts to transport students.
But one common thread between all these buses is the design of the seats which do protect the children.
“We have the panels that are extremely high where it protects our students from lunging forward. We have the anti-air brakes in most of our busses,” Ramirez said.
The large seat cushions or panels are familiar to anyone who rode a bus growing up as the length of the seat provides a cushion to brace any impact from a potential crash.
“In the event of having to stop quickly, really what they do is prevent a student to going over a seat,” Ramirez said.
While Arizona saw more than a 50% decrease in bus crashes from 2012 to 2022, according to data from the ADOT, many still question if the cushions are enough in a high-speed crash.
“Seat belts are independently different due to what district you’re at and what your necessity is,” Ramirez said.
In 2018, the NTSB recommended that every state require seatbelts on buses, but Arizona has not implemented it.
That means it’s up to the individual districts to implement what they see fit.
“Typically, districts get together and talk about what is needed or necessary in their own district and what they have come across,” Ramirez said.
TUSD just received a new fleet of buses, and 13 News reached out to see if there are different safety features like seatbelts on those buses but we have not received a response yet.
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Copyright 2025 13 News. All rights reserved.
Arizona
Arizona guard Conrad Martinez enters NCAA transfer portal

For most of this past season Arizona religiously used an 8-man rotation with the occasional foray deeper into the bench. When a ninth player was needed it was usually Conrad Martinez, including a couple times during the Big 12 and NCAA tournaments.
But by and large, minutes were hard to come by for Martinez during his two seasons with the Wildcats. A bigger role is more likely elsewhere.
Martinez has entered the NCAA transfer portal, according to Wildcat Authority’s Jason Scheer, the fourth UA scholarship player to do so since the season ended last week.
The 6-foot sophomore guard from Spain appeared in 41 games in two seasons for Arizona, scoring 53 points with 32 assists and 13 steals. He averaged five minutes in 22 games in 2024-25, scoring 1.6 points per game while making 66.7 percent of his shots (including 5 of 10 from 3) and 87.5 percent of his limited free throw attempts.
Martinez scored a career-high nine points against Central Michigan in December, when he logged a career-best 20 minutes of floor time. Most of his appearances came in the final minutes of blowouts, though in the Big 12 Tournament semifinal and final he entered late in the first half, the same in the Sweet 16 loss against Duke when early foul trouble for Jaden Bradley kept him on the bench.
Playing the final 6:07 of the first half, Martinez had a steal and also hit a corner 3 that tied the game at 32.
He joins guard KJ Lewis and centers Emmanuel Stephen and Henri Veesaar in the portal from Arizona. The Wildcats currently have five scholarship players on the roster but that includes freshman Carter Bryant, who is expected to declare for the 2025 NBA Draft.
Arizona
Arizona attorney general calls proposed health care cuts 'illegal'

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