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Letter to the Editor
Food bank hosting back-to-school backpack drive

Dear Editor, Families are preparing for children to

Pin-up dolls crown 2026 Queen at festive Rhythm

KINGMAN, Ariz. – The third annual Rhythm and

arrested in handcuffs
Snakes, kittens confiscated for endangerment

GOLDEN VALLEY, Ariz. – A Hesperia, California man

courtroom
Armed school campus intruder takes plea

KINGMAN – The man who possessed an odd

Advisory announced following three heat-related deaths at Grand

GRAND CANYON, Ariz. – Grand Canyon National Park

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Wind power encompasses 100,000 acres of BLM land

KINGMAN — Pictured is the White Hills Wind Project with 127 turbo-powered windmills setting on 100,000 plus acres owned by the Bureau of Land Management. On U.S. 93 in northwestern Mohave County, they provide energy to 100,000 homes in California, but none to Arizona or Mohave County.

The windmills have a life span of 20 to 25 years, then each is dismantled and recycled, except for the blades, reach up to 300 feet long and made of fiberglass and other materials that cannot be recycled. The blades are then cut in smaller pieces and buried in landfills.

However, they do not decay over time. Mohave County Supervisors have expressed strong opposition to them in the county, but they don’t have precedence over federal land.