The Pima County Board renamed the César Chávez Holiday, moved to hold Sheriff Nanos accountable under oath, and kept 53 seniors housed — all in one day. Full breakdown inside.
Los Nombres Que Dijeron: The Pima County Meeting That History Will Remember
The New York Times took five years to investigate. The Pima County Board of Supervisors took six days to act. And a sheriff who lied under oath while a nation watched him search for a missing 84-year-old woman finally ran out of runway.
The week before this meeting, the New York Times published a story that permanently altered how this community views one of its most celebrated icons. The Arizona Republic ran a story that confirmed long-held suspicions about the man heading the county’s largest law enforcement agency.
On Tuesday morning, the Board of Supervisors had to deal with both of them…