News

Corcoran and Tulare Lake face up to 10 feet of ground sinking due to unchecked groundwater pumping by J.G. Boswell’s El Rico GSA in Kings County, California.
As the search for solutions to the shrinking Great Salt Lake continues, researchers at Utah State University opened up conversations with the biggest water users in the state: farmers.
The company, which controls the El Rico Groundwater Sustainability Agency (GSA), still plans to allow so much groundwater pumping within its boundaries that it could sink the old Tulare Lake bed ...
Utah farmers in the Great Salt Lake Basin feel unfairly blamed for the lake’s issues, despite reducing water use and shrinking agricultural parcels.
Among the findings resulting from those interviews is that farmers in the Great Salt Lake Basin feel they are “scapegoats” and “unfairly blamed” for the complex problem.
The Lake Champlain Basin Marine Debris Coalition is made up of organizations whose mission is to raise awareness and reduce presence of marine debris.
While some groundwater managers in the Tulare Lake subbasin look for ways to come together on pumping limits in order to comply with state mandates, the giant J.G. Boswell Farming […] ...
The Kings River’s annual run-off volume swelled to 4.5 million acre-feet, a 40-year record that produced floods so large that most of Tulare Lake was revived as floodwater collected in the old ...