place

Arizona's 6th congressional district

1993 establishments in ArizonaCongressional districts of ArizonaConstituencies established in 1993Government of Maricopa County, ArizonaGovernment of Pinal County, Arizona
Use mdy dates from October 2020

Arizona's 6th congressional district is a congressional district located in the U.S. state of Arizona and encompasses all of Greenlee County, most of Cochise County, and parts of Pima County, Pinal County and Graham County. Most of its population resides in suburbs of Tucson, including Oro Valley, Marana, Green Valley, and Vail. The district is currently represented by Republican Juan Ciscomani. It was one of 18 districts that would have voted for Joe Biden in the 2020 presidential election had they existed in their current configuration while being won or held by a Republican in 2022. The new 6th district includes a notable military presence. The Fort Huachuca installation is located in Cochise County, approximately 15 miles (24 km) north of the Mexican border, and is within the city of Sierra Vista.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Arizona's 6th congressional district (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Arizona's 6th congressional district
East Chino Drive, Scottsdale

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Arizona's 6th congressional districtContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 33.666944444444 ° E -111.88861111111 °
placeShow on map

Address

East Chino Drive 8845
85255 Scottsdale
Arizona, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

Share experience

Nearby Places

Pinnacle Presbyterian Church

Pinnacle Presbyterian Church is a Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) congregation of more than 1,200 members located in north Scottsdale, Arizona. Pinnacle started October 1, 1989, in the Glenn Moor Clubhouse in Troon Country Club with 25 committed, visionary members. After four years, the congregation had grown to 110 members and moved from the over-crowded country club into a chapel built on 25 acres of land purchased by and donated to the church. On Palm Sunday 1994, founding pastor Dr. Larry Corbett stood outside the chapel and called the people to worship. There were more than 200 people present. Dr. Corbett brought years of experience with him as the organizing minister, was familiar with the area, and understood what a new church needed to grow. His years at Pinnacle were characterized by commitment, compassion, and passion for the gospel of Christ. In the fall of 1995, Pinnacle Presbyterian Preschool opened with two teachers and eight students. Associate Pastor for Christian Education, the Rev. Janet Arbesman, developed a church school in the five classrooms. Today, it has more than 26 teachers and staff and 168 students. The Rev. Dr. Duane Holloran replaced the Rev. Arbesman in 1998. Coming from a clinical psychology background, he developed family life programs and strengthened the adult education program through Bible classes. Lisa Armstrong assumed leadership of the Christian Education of children and youth when the church school children attendance called for full-time leadership. After Dr. Holloran retired, the congregation asked the Rev. Francis Park to step in as a part-time pastor while the Associate Pastor search continued. In December 2003, the Rev. Mac Schafer received a call to become Associate Pastor. Rev. Schafer and his family came from Lawrenceville, N.J. He was responsible for ministry with families, adult education, and a shared pastoral ministry with the other clergy staff. Phase two and three of the building program provided a sanctuary that accommodated growth, a memorial garden, much-needed off-street parking, and a fellowship hall. Next in the construction plan came five additional classrooms and an atelier for the preschool and church school, choir facilities, more offices for staff, and a sanctuary that seats 800 worshipers. In 2006, the congregation authorized construction of the next phase including additional church classrooms, a youth building, an addition to the fellowship hall, and additional parking spaces. Realizing the need to focus on the increasing number of youth in the church, the congregation called the Rev. Kristin Willett as Associate Pastor for Youth and their Families in 2007. She and her husband, Brandon, were recent graduates of Princeton Theological Seminary, N.J. In August 2007, Dr. Corbett retired from Pinnacle and accepted a call to a church in Honolulu, Hawaii. A search committee of the session appointed Rev. Schafer interim pastor. At the same time, they increased the hours of Rev. Park to help meet the needs of the congregation. In April 2009, the congregation called Dr. Wesley Avram to be the new Pastor/Head of Staff at Pinnacle after a nearly two-year search.

Scottsdale Airport
Scottsdale Airport

Scottsdale Airport (IATA: SCF, ICAO: KSDL, FAA LID: SDL) is a municipal airport located 9 miles (7.8 nmi; 14 km) north of downtown Scottsdale, in Maricopa County, Arizona, United States. Most U.S. airports use the same three-letter location identifier for the FAA and IATA, but Scottsdale Airport is SDL to the FAA and SCF to the IATA (which assigned SDL to Midlanda Airport in Sundsvall, Sweden).Federal Aviation Administration records say the airport had 4,798 passenger boardings (or enplanements) in calendar year 2005 and 266 enplanements in 2006. The FAA's National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems for 2007–2011 called Scottsdale a reliever airport. It is one of the busiest single-runway general aviation airports in the nation with 186,514 operations in 2019. The airport offers clearance, ground and tower services from 1300Z to 0400Z (6 am to 9 pm local time) daily.U.S. Customs service is available daily from 9 am to 7 pm. This allows visitors from all over the world to come to Scottsdale with proper visas. Neighbors’ complaints about aircraft noise around the airport increased beginning in 2004, peaking in 2005 with over 15,000 complaints being logged. In 2019, complaints decreased significantly to 1,919 complaints. It is unlikely that the airport would close, due to federal grant assurances and its tremendous economic impact. Scottsdale Airport is an important economic asset for Scottsdale and the region, contributing hundreds of millions of dollars in economic output. Aviation activity at the airport and in the surrounding airpark created $688 million in total economic benefits for the region in FY2019, with aviation activity supporting around 3,979 jobs. Economic benefits of $1.9 million are created daily.