California
Amazon Will Start Drone Deliveries In Arizona This Year—And End California Service
Topline
Amazon will begin delivering packages by drone in Phoenix later this year, the company announced Monday, marking the latest expansion for its new but still fairly small drone delivery program—though California’s drone service will be ending this year.
Amazon’s new MK30 Prime Air drone is displayed during Amazon’s “Delivering the Future” event at the … [+]
Key Facts
Amazon announced customers in the West Valley of the Phoenix metro area will be able to get same-day drone deliveries later this year from a delivery site in Tolleson, Arizona, a town about 13 miles west of Phoenix.
In the same release announcing the expansion of the program into Arizona, Amazon said it will close its drone delivery site near Sacramento, California—though all employees will be offered opportunities at other sites.
Prime Air, Amazon’s drone delivery program, aims to get packages that are five pounds or smaller to customers in about 30 minutes, The Verge reported.
Big Number
Two. That’s how many places Amazon will be offering drone delivery once the Arizona site opens. The company began testing drone deliveries in College Station, Texas, and Lockeford, California, in 2022. Though the California option is closing, Amazon said it will continue drone delivery in Texas and “will open further U.S. locations in 2025.”
Surprising Fact
The most popular item ordered through drone delivery is AA batteries, Amazon said in a release last October. Beauty and drugstore products are also offered as some of the thousands of products available weighing less than five pounds.
Key Background
Prime Air was first outlined by Amazon founder and chairman Jeff Bezos in 2013 as a service that would allow for products to be taken from an Amazon warehouse to someone’s home in less than 30 minutes. It took the service nearly 10 years to be ready to launch, though, and just after it did, the Prime Air division was hit with layoffs, CNBC reported. The service remains small: Last May, Amazon told CNBC it made just 100 drone deliveries that year across its two markets, despite predicting it would deliver 10,000 deliveries by the end of that year. In October, Amazon revealed its newest Prime Air drone, the MK30, which is still in flight testing as of April. The new drone is quieter, can fly further than the current drone being used and “can operate in more diverse weather conditions, including light rain,” the company said. The MK30 drones are scheduled to replace Prime Air’s current drones by the end of 2024.
What We Don’t Know
Exactly when drone delivery will start in Arizona. Amazon simply said “later this year” when announcing the program’s expansion to the Phoenix area. Amazon said it is working with the Federal Aviation Administration and local officials and will begin reaching out to customers when it has received all the needed approvals.
Further Reading
California
2 California men charged in alleged ISIS support scheme
Three U.S. citizens were arrested Friday and accused of conspiring to provide material support to the Islamic State group, including raising money to purchase drones and rocket-propelled grenades allegedly intended for attacks against American service members deployed overseas.
The suspects were identified as Bisaam Ghafoor, 21, of Leawood, Kansas, Elias Shamsaldeen, 21, of Porterville, California and Bereen Dzayee, 25, of Lakeside, California.
According to a criminal complaint filed in the District of Kansas, the three men conspired to provide material support to ISIS by collectively sending more than $2,000 to a person they believed was a member of the terrorist organization.
Federal authorities allege that from at least February 2025 through June 2026, the defendants communicated through Discord chats, voice calls and other messaging platforms about plans to support ISIS through personnel, services and financial contributions.
Investigators said the men pledged allegiance to ISIS and its leader and exchanged messages in social media groups that promoted violence on behalf of the organization.
The complaint alleges that Ghafoor said it would be “sick” if his name could be written on a drone used in an attack against Americans. Dzayee allegedly suggested that U.S. Special Forces personnel should be among the targets of drone attacks.
Authorities also said Shamsaldeen expressed a desire to stab and injure a U.S. service member. According to the complaint, Ghafoor stated that he had always wanted to kill a female soldier by beheading and added, “I wish I could kill 300,000,000 Americans.”
Investigators allege that Ghafoor’s name was written on the projectile of a rocket-propelled grenade that was purportedly intended for use in an overseas attack against U.S. military personnel. Shamsaldeen allegedly provided money intended for the purchase of drones that were to be used to attack and kill American service members deployed abroad.
The complaint further alleges that the defendants and others discussed traveling outside the United States to fight on behalf of ISIS and, in some communications, expressed a willingness to die for the organization.
“This administration has put terrorists, cartels, and gangs on notice,” Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche said in a statement. “Today’s arrest of three individuals who allegedly conspired to provide material support to ISIS makes clear our commitment to taking down terrorist networks — anywhere.”
FBI Director Kash Patel said the suspects allegedly pledged allegiance to ISIS, plotted attacks and targeted U.S. service members, adding that the arrests prevented further acts of violence.
Assistant Attorney General for National Security John A. Eisenberg said the defendants are accused of supporting a “ruthless terrorist organization” and helping fund plans to kill American service members overseas.
The investigation was conducted by FBI Joint Terrorism Task Forces in Kansas City, San Diego and Sacramento, with assistance from FBI field offices in Richmond and Newark.
The three men are charged with conspiracy to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization.
California
GOP gubernatorial candidate Steve Hilton calls for faster vote counting in California elections
SAN MATEO, Calif. (KGO) — Republican gubernatorial candidate Steve Hilton, who is currently leading in the race and is likely to advance to November’s primary, is calling for faster ballot counting as officials continue processing votes.
Hilton appeared in the Bay Area, holding a rally Friday morning outside the San Mateo County Elections Office in San Mateo. There, he criticized the state’s ballot-counting timeline, urging changes to speed up results.
Election officials say the system prioritizes accuracy over speed. California law allows ballots to be counted if they arrive up to a week after Election Day, as long as they are postmarked by then. State officials argue the policy ensures more voters are able to participate, particularly those casting mail-in ballots at the last minute.
Hilton has proposed additional resources to accelerate the counting process, including an “Emergency Election Support Corps” to assist counties.
Slow CA vote count criticized by Trump, GOP governor hopeful Steve Hilton: ‘Another Democrat fiasco’
“It involves surging workers to these election centers so you don’t just have empty places, nothing happening,” Hilton said. “People working around the clock to make this happen. I’m proposing a regional surge team for every area where the counties don’t have the resources.”
Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office pushed back in a statement, saying, “It’s concerning that a candidate for Governor doesn’t know the Governor has nothing to do with counting ballots.”
Local election officials also disputed Hilton’s characterization of the process. Jim Irizarry, San Mateo County’s assistant chief elections officer, said staffing is already in place and working continuously.
“Well, that’s not correct,” Irizarry said of Hilton’s claim that there are election centers with nothing happening. “Here in San Mateo County, we have two crews working full-time here to actually process all of the ballots that we have. In California, we’re governed under the ‘California Voters Choice Act,’ which provides a 30-day certification process to ensure that every vote that is cast is counted. So it’s very inclusionary. It’s safe and secure, and it takes time.”
Inside the elections office, ABC7 Eyewitness News saw workers processing ballots, including conducting what officials call a “1% dice roll” to determine which votes will be manually double-checked Monday, a step designed to ensure accuracy in the count. Officials say crews are working overtime, around the clock.
LIVE: See latest election results here
Final results are still days, and possibly weeks, away as ballot processing continues statewide.
County elections officials need to finalize their official results by 30 days after the election. The Secretary of State certifies results 38 days after the election.
Hilton is stopping short of claims by some GOP members that California is rigging votes by taking time to count and certify election results, despite continuing delays in final tallies.
There is no evidence to support such claims.
Copyright © 2026 KGO-TV. All Rights Reserved.
California
About half of California waterways contaminated with Pfas, pesticide analysis finds
Around half of California waterways tested by regulators are contaminated with pesticides considered Pfas, “forever chemicals”, a new analysis of state and federal records shows, highlighting a risk in the substances’ wide use that is only beginning to come into focus.
The pesticides are linked to a range of health problems, including cancer, and the review is the first to systematically check for the dangerous substances in streams and rivers, which include drinking water sources.
More than half of sediment samples also showed some levels of the pesticides, which are increasingly applied to California and the nation’s food crops.
The review of California department of pesticide regulation and United States geological survey data was released this week, just days before a proposal to eventually ban Pfas pesticides failed to make it through the state assembly. However, pieces of the legislation, including a moratorium on approvals of the new pesticides, passed.
The findings are “alarming but not surprising”, said Varun Subramaniam, one of the report’s co-authors with the Environmental Working Group (EWG) non-profit.
“It’s concerning that we’re finding these levels of Pfas pesticide … but they were applied at really high rates on produce, so it makes sense that they’re in the streams and sediment,” he said.
Pfas are a class of at least 16,000 compounds most frequently used to make products water-, stain- and grease-resistant. They have been linked to cancer, birth defects, decreased immunity, high cholesterol, kidney disease and a range of other serious health problems. They are dubbed “forever chemicals” because they can persist for thousands of years in the environment, and are designed to be indestructible.
The chemicals are added as an active ingredient to food crop pesticides to kill weeds or insects, or used as an inert ingredient. At least 60% of active ingredients in pesticides fit the most widely accepted definition of Pfas, a 2023 analysis of EPA data found.
California farms applied an average of 2.5m lb of Pfas per year on cropland from 2018 to 2023, a review of state records last year revealed. Recent regulatory testing found the pesticide residues on 37% of all produce. But about 90% of peaches, plums and nectarines contained Pfas, while 80% of strawberries and grapes showed them.
Public health advocates have said the pesticides almost certainly pollute nearby water sources, and the new analysis confirmed their theory. Regulators only tested streams from 10 counties, and found the highest concentrations in agricultural areas, including Monterey and San Luis Obispo counties.
Previous research showed the highest applications of Pfa pesticides in Fresno and Kern counties, but water pollution data was not collected in those regions. The results are “almost certainly an undercount” because of the limited scope, Subramaniam said.
At least 10 Pfas in pesticides were identified across the state. The pesticide bifenthrin, which is among the most toxic and linked to cancer, was found in all San Luis Obispo waterways, and more than 80% of samples in Stanislaus county, which holds Modesto and portions of the Central valley.
The health threat is difficult to determine because pesticide laws do not require companies to assess many of the health threats common to Pfas, like immunotoxicity, reproductive harm, or hormone disruption, in part because the regulators do not have proper resources, Subramaniam said. Regulators also do not consider the cumulative effect of drinking water contaminated with the Pfas, then eating produce containing its residues.
“The fact that the chemicals are permitted is largely because we’re not considering all the ways that they can harm us,” Subramaniam added.
Amid pressure from the powerful agricultural lobby, the proposal to fully ban Pfas pesticides by 2035 failed, but the moratorium on new pesticides survived. The California Farm Bureau, in its opposition to the bill, wrote that the legislation is an “overly broad and unworkable approach that departs from science-based regulation”. It argued that California farmers would be put at an economic disadvantage with little health benefit to the public.
The legislation still includes a new requirement that pesticides come with warnings to farmers that alert them that they are using Pfas with health and environmental risks. Susan Little, California legislative director for EWG, said most farmers are unaware that they are spreading Pfas on food crops.
The legislation also gives local leaders more power to limit the pesticides’ use, and defines the pesticides as Pfas, which is in line with most scientific definitions. California’s pesticide office currently uses a narrow definition of Pfas that is favored by industry in part because it excludes smaller compounds like those used in pesticides.
Advocates say the legislation is especially needed with the Trump administration rushing to approve more Pfas pesticides for use. California’s pesticide office also recently reapproved the Pfas insecticide sulfoxaflor despite that its approval has repeatedly been struck down by state and federal courts over its high toxicity to honeybees and other pollinators.
Little said advocates are “disappointed” the ban did not make it into the final bill, but added the bill, if approved by the state senate, “will continue to address and reduce the use of Pfas pesticides in California”.
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