Orders from Washington for releases at two dams didn’t benefit anyone and made nobody happy, except maybe the president.
Critics say splitting California's dams and aqueducts into dueling government agencies could be dangerous, and potentially deadly.
So why was the water released? On Friday evening, President Donald Trump confirmed what many had already suspected — it was his idea.
There are growing questions about the effectiveness of a plan to address California's water crisis, weeks after the deadly ...
Jan. 31, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers increased the amount of flow from Terminus Dam and Shafer Dam in Tulare County in ...
President Trump’s order to release billions of gallons of water in California’s Central Valley last week — with the purported goal of dousing fires 100 miles away — is being ...
The sudden announcement Thursday by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Kaweah and Success Lakes would immediately begin dumping water was in response to President Trump’s Jan. 24 executive order ...
Governor Gavin Newsom is in the nation’s capital on Wednesday where he plans to meet with President Trump. Newsom is hoping to secure aid for victims of the deadly wildfires in Los Angeles.
Chris Hayes explains how Trump's obsession with California's water supply, which led him to order the opening of dams, will ...
The Army Corps of Engineers suddenly opened up the dams of California’s Lake Kaweah and Lake Success over the weekend. The three day-long releases cost the two Tulare County reservoirs more than 2.2 ...
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