Filtering by
- All Subjects: Agriculture
- All Subjects: Agricultural laborers -- Arizona
Letter from W. W. Bass to Carl Hayden requesting the boundaries of the park be reconsidered as a large portion of the land is suitable for mining and farming.
Letter from Carl Hayden to W. W. Bass concerning the passing of the national park bill. Hayden states that he will try to make the bill as advantageous to Arizona miners and farmers as possible, but the land will either remain as a national monument or become a national park. A postscript is added concerning the land allocated for the Havasupai Tribe.
Mission: To regulate and support Arizona Agriculture in a manner that encourages farming, ranching and agribusiness, while protecting consumers and natural resources.
Amendments to the bill establishing the Grand Canyon a National Monument. Circa 1908.
This report serves as an addendum to the Navajo County Community Health Status Assessment dated January of 2010. In most cases, the original data table from the 2010 report is reproduced here with an updated table below. The scope of the project was to update all data where current secondary sources of information existed. In a few instances, the research team did obtain primary data by telephone calls.
The CHSA focuses on 11 health status indicators which include: demographic characteristics, socioeconomic characteristics, health resource availability, quality of life, behavioral risk factors, environmental health, social and mental health, maternal and child health, death, illness and injury, communicable disease, and sentinel events.
The results of a 2014 mail survey of 824 residents of Gilbert, to determine residents' level of satisfaction with the delivery of town services (particularly drinking water, and parks and recreation facilities) and the quality of life in Gilbert, Arizona.
The results of a 2013 mail survey of 272 residents of Gilbert, to determine residents' level of satisfaction with the delivery of town services, civic participation, and the quality of life in Gilbert, Arizona.
The results of a late 2010 telephone survey of 502 residents of Gilbert, to determine resident attitudes to growth and development, town policies, allocation of tax dollars, town services and general satisfaction with the quality of life in Gilbert, Arizona.
In 1993, the Arizona-Mexico Commission and its sister organization, the Comisión Sonora-Arizona, initiated a binational strategic economic planning process to analyze how the two neighboring states could increase their regional competitiveness in the world economy and enhance the overall quality of life for their residents. One of the recommendations of the Strategic Economic Development Vision was to develop a set of indicators as a tool to monitor progress toward the goals of binational economic development. The purpose of the Regional Economic Indicators is to help policy and decision-makers understand and monitor economic changes in the Arizona-Sonora region and to support policies that promote economic transformation, investment and entrepreneurship in the region.