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The Texas Water Development Board is an agency of the government of Texas with authority over water development in the state. The Board appoints directors for regional water development agencies such as the Lower Neches Valley Authority. [1] In the 2007 Texas constitutional amendment election, Proposition 16 on the ballot passed with more than ...
Despite that concern, the DNR has approved Osceola's request to move about 4 million gallons from two city water bodies, Grade Lake and Q Pond, to West Lake, the reservoir that supplies the city's ...
Des Moines Water Works, Iowa's largest water utility, could see a $155 million shortfall, based on preliminary estimates. Rates would have to dramatically increase if it were to cover all of the ...
A petition argues the Iowa DNR has run out of chances; the state needs a drastic change in direction, now, writes the Register editorial board. Yeah, we all want clean water. Somebody in Iowa ...
The Texas State Soil and Water Conservation Board (TSSWCB) is a state agency of Texas, headquartered in Temple. [1] The agency enforces the state's soil and water conservation laws and coordinates conservation and nonpoint source pollution abatement programs. The Texas State Legislature created the agency in 1939. [2]
May 30—AUSTIN — State Representative Brooks Landgraf (R-Odessa) hosted a virtual meeting between Odessa city officials and leadership at the Texas Water Development Board (TWDB) on Thursday to ...
The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act is a law that establishes the ownership of cultural items excavated or discovered on federal or tribal land after November 16, 1990. The act also applies to land transferred by the federal government to the states under the Water Resources Department Act. [6]
The request to the Iowa Department of Natural Resources to pursue the $16.5 million project was the first in the state seeking to recycle wastewater to supply drinking water.