LA had planned to take substantially less from the iconic Eastern Sierra lake this winter. The decision is a blow to conservationists who have been trying to restore the lake for decades.
California is burning — literally and metaphorically. The wildfires consuming Los Angeles are just the latest disaster in a long, smoggy parade of failure. Bureaucratic gridlock, punishing taxes, and regulations so overbearing they feel like an act of vengeance — California’s leaders have turned the state into a raging inferno,
President Donald Trump said Tuesday he will visit Nevada soon as part of the first U.S. trip of his new term in office.
A slow-moving low-pressure system will linger over the Southwest, bringing steady rain through at least Monday.
President Donald Trump’s first trip since returning to the White House will take him to Asheville, North Carolina, and the Los Angeles area in California, communities where he has loudly criticized the federal response to recent natural disasters.
After the devastation of the Los Angeles fires, officials are ready to rebuild. But defending against future fires requires thinking about more than buildings.
Case in point: the Ivanpah solar project. Maybe you’ve seen the unsightly, blindingly bright towers while traveling from L.A. to Las Vegas, in the Mojave Desert near the California-Nevada state line. Maybe you’ve read about birds getting fried to death as they fly through the sunlight directed to the tops of the towers by fields of mirrors.
President Trump will travel to North Carolina, California and Nevada this week for the first trips of his presidency, he told reporters on Tuesday. The president said he will be going Friday to
The first official visit of President Trump’s second term will include Nevada and the disaster-stricken states of North Carolina and California.
Fires have devastated the greater Los Angeles area throughout January, prompting volunteers like Bruce Berwager to step up and assist those affected. Berwager,
Deputy CAL FIRE Nevada-Yuba-Placer Unit (NEU) Chief Jim Hudson, a resident of Nevada County, and his team of 67 personnel were deployed to Los Angeles the day the fires started.
President Donald Trump thanked his Nevada supporters for their votes in November's election and touted his push to eliminate income taxes on tips during a visit to Las Vegas on Saturday.