Media Moves

Tucson Sentinel names Nintzel government and political impact reporter

The following excerpt was sent out from tucsonsentinel.com:

Jim Nintzel (Photo: Paul Ingram, TucsonSentinel.com)

Longtime local journalist Jim Nintzel, who worked as a reporter and editor at the Tucson Weekly for more than three decades before stepping down last year, is joining the Tucson Sentinel staff to serve as the Government & Political Impact reporter.

Beginning in July, he’ll become the local independent nonprofit newsroom’s designated watchdog over state and federal government issues as they impact the residents of Southern Arizona. Nintzel will also join the rest of the Sentinel staff in keeping our readers abreast of the latest ducks, dips, dives and dodges of area political candidates and bureaucrats.

“I’ve long admired what Editor and Publisher Dylan Smith and the small-but-mighty team have done at the Sentinel over the last decade and I’m thrilled to return to writing about Arizona politics,” said Nintzel, who was also a regular on Arizona Public Media’s “Reporters Roundtable.”

His beat will include enterprise and trend stories about discussions and decisions in Phoenix and Washington, D.C., always through the lens of what it means to Tucson and Pima County.

The new Government & Political Impact reporter position is backed in part by the nonprofit Report for America, a project which supports reporters in newsrooms throughout the nation. Nintzel landed his first job in the journalism business while he was still attending Alice Vail Junior High, delivering the much-missed Tucson Citizen to his neighbors. He would read the paper while folding his stack before setting out on his bike for his route.

In his career at the Weekly, Nintzel won more than 50 statewide and national journalism awards for his coverage of politics, government, science and other feature writing. He was named a journalist of the year multiple times by the Arizona Press Club and Arizona Newspaper Association.

Nintzel has appeared on ABC, CBS, CNN and other national networks, as well as serving as the Friday host of AZPM’s “Arizona Illustrated.” After a shake-up at AZPM, he then hosted his own “Zona Politics” interview program, broadcast on various channels. He has also been an adjunct journalism instructor at the University of Arizona, teaching the core Reporting Public Affairs course for more than 15 years. Nintzel joined the Weekly after graduating from the University of Arizona with a creative writing degree in 1989, starting his career running errands for the advertising department. Within a few years, he was working as a reporter for the paper.

Mariam Ahmed

Recent Posts

Could CNBC become an acquisition target?

Dylan Byers of Puck writes about the recent upswing in CNBC viewers and its prospects after…

2 hours ago

Reuters, NY Times among Deadline Club biz reporting finalists

The Deadline Club has named the finalists in its 2025 Awards contest. Winners will be…

3 hours ago

“Marketplace”‘s Ryssdal on being a voice of economic reality

Josh Hersh of Columbia Journalism Review interviewed Kai Ryssdal, host of "Marketplace," a leading daily radio…

3 hours ago

Business Insider seeks a leadership and workplace editor

Business Insider is hiring a Leadership and Workplace Editor to drive coverage on leadership strategies, career advancement, evolving…

3 hours ago

San Antonio Biz Journal seeks a reporter

This position will be Hybrid in the office/market 3 days per week, and those days…

6 hours ago

Former Quartz owner says its future is “extremely bright”

G/O Media CEO Jim Spanfeller pushed back against comments that the financial news site Quartz,…

6 hours ago