The Southern California wildfires reached 100 percent containment on January 31, the same day that President Donald Trump ...
There is a school of thought that the 2.2 billion gallons of water that President Trump ordered the Army Corps of Engineers ...
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers opened two dams in Tulare County, releasing large amounts of water into river channels ...
Hernandez said the water would go to Tulare Lake, a dry lakebed that last filled up during record-high rainfall in 2023. Other water experts said it would have been nearly impossible to divert the ...
Tulare County water managers were perplexed and frustrated ... The winter flood control capacity limit for Lake Kaweah is 12,000 acre feet and it was holding about 39,000 acre feet Thursday morning, ...
None of the Kaweah River’s water was destined for elsewhere in California — in wet years it flows into the remnants of once-giant Tulare Lake, which has no outlet, and in dry ones the river ...
The water was being held behind federal dams at Lake Kaweah east of Visalia and Success Lake near Porterville. As reported by Lois Henry of the website SJV Water, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers last ...
In the big picture, the amount of water was not huge. It was the process. He (President Trump) has no idea how bad he effed ...
Groundwater Sustainability Agencies (GSA) in the Tulare Lake Subbasin (TLSB) remain focused on complying with SGMA as KCFB’s ...
President Trump's order to significantly release water from two Tulare County reservoirs has raised concerns among local officials and farmers.
The water release occurred late last week via the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and involved the opening of two Tulare County dams — in Lake Kaweah and Success Lake — located in the heart of ...