President Donald Trump claimed that the military entered California and turned on the water, but state water officials say the president's claim is false.
The California Department of Water Resources (DWR) is set to conduct its second snow survey of the season on Friday at Phillips Station nea
California water officials are pushing back on false claims by the White House that the Trump administration sent the U.S. military to quote “turn on the water” in the wake of the Los Angeles County
The California Department of Water Resources (CDWR) is pushing back on President Trump’s recent claim that the U.S. military entered the state and “turned on the water” in the wake of
The California Department of Water Resources has shot down President Donald Trump’s latest attempt to play the hero during the devastating Los Angeles wildfires. “The United States Military just entered the Great State of California and,
California water regulators have said there's no truth to President Donald Trump's claim that the U_S_ military entered the state and "turned on the water."
Wildfires in Southern California have prompted major discussions about water in the state. Here's an overview of where water comes from in the region.
SoCal water suppliers are upbeat about water being released in the pipeline from NorCal, in addition to a rain forecast
California leaders are disputing a claim from President Donald Trump about the state's water resources.
Trump's pledge to pump more water in California came after a reduction in pumping at a federal facility due to maintenance. Federal data show pumping has since resumed at normal levels.
The reality, though — especially after heavy “atmospheric river” rains in mid-November and December drenched Northern California — is that farms will receive far more water than the 5% of requested amounts promised them in late December, when state officials behaved as if the November downpours would be the water year’s last precipitation.