Here’s when forecasters expect the bathtub ring, marking where the high water mark once reached, to be at its worst in recorded history.
Lake Mead
The Colorado River, which provides Las Vegas’ main water supply via Lake Mead, is in crisis in more ways than one.
Federal officials gave the clearest timeline yet for when a breakthrough could come in closed-door negotiations over the water supply of 40 million Americans.
Water managers are eager to attend this year’s annual policy gathering in Las Vegas.
From the birth of the agency that took on Southern Nevada’s water crisis to the installation of a third straw at Lake Mead , a small but mighty woman has been there through it all: Pat Mulroy.
For Las Vegas to keep its taps flowing, Rep. Susie Lee says this one drought measure must survive federal spending purges: water recycling.
Federal scientists predict that the reservoir — critical to Las Vegas’ future — is in for trouble.
While it’s true that the Boring Co. is feeling the heat from regulators after illegally dumping toxic chemicals into manholes, officials say Southern Nevadans have nothing to worry about when they turn on their taps.
In an era of government efficiency, some projects cost less to conserve water, an analysis shows.
Two longtime water managers, including a senior adviser on the contentious Colorado River negotiations, have new top roles at the Interior Department.
The crisis along the Colorado River is coming to a head as seven state negotiators fail to deliver an agreement on how to manage it over the next 20 years.
The Las Vegas Strip is known for excess. Here’s one executive who’s working to change that narrative.
An abandoned boat discovered at Lake Mead during drought conditions three years ago has been removed, an official confirmed.
The Colorado River system that Las Vegas relies on for life is nearer to collapse than ever, a group of six researchers warned in a new report.
The official nominated to anchor a rocky Colorado River negotiation process with an impending deadline claims he was iced out by Upper Basin officials who thought he would be biased against them.
