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Sedona
Saturday, May 18, 2024

wastewater

City asks for $15 million

City officials representing Sedona in the hopes of receiving federal funding are calling a recent trip to Washington, D.C., a success. “I think it was successful,” Interim City Manager Alison Zelms said. “We made good contacts.” Zelms and Mayor...

Chapel sewer controversy up for review

In the city of Sedona’s process of providing sewer to nearly 50 percent of the city, not everyone who has gotten it has wanted it. According to Interim City Manager Alison Zelms, people in areas that have received sewer...

Septic tanks: what are the costs?

Chapel area residents are currently disposing of effluent with on-site wastewater disposal systems — the most common among them — septic systems. Although Tiffany Construc-tion began installing city sewer lines to the Chapel area on Aug. 4, after receiving...

Sale of water credits could finance sewer treatment plan

  Before Sedonans find themselves swimming in a sea of wastewater, City Council finally decided  how to dispose of it. On July 8, council approved a report that recommends the city dispose of its...

City’s $75M debt goes for essentials

Sedona’s most valuable asset sits southwest of the city on Hwy. 89A, where taxpayers can freely admire $52 million dollars going for waste. By Susan Johnson Larson Newspapers Sedona’s most valuable asset...

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Two prescribed burn projects fire up May 13-16

Coconino National Forest fire managers will resume plans for the Horseshoe Wild Bill and Maxwell Springs prescribed burn projects...

JCSVV celebrates building a ‘tabernacle in the desert’

“When you come together as a community, there’s something special that happens when you review a life with each...
Larson Newspapers