New home construction that relies on groundwater will stop in some parts of Arizona after a report released this month revealed the state’s booming population will outgrow its drought-stricken water supply if action isn’t taken. Jonathan Vigliotti reports.

#arizona #water #news

“CBS Evening News with Norah O’Donnell” delivers the latest news and original reporting, and goes beyond the headlines with context and depth. Catch the “CBS Evening News” weeknights at 6:30 p.m. ET on the CBS Television Network and at 10 p.m. ET on the CBS News app.

Subscribe to the “CBS Evening News” YouTube channel: https://bit.ly/1S7Dhik
Watch full episodes of “CBS Evening News”: https://cbsn.ws/23XekKA
Follow “CBS Evening News” on Instagram: https://bit.ly/1T8icTO
Like “CBS Evening News” on Facebook: https://on.fb.me/1KxYobb
Follow “CBS Evening News” on Twitter: https://bit.ly/1O3dTTe
Download the CBS News app: https://cbsn.ws/1Xb1WC8
Try Paramount+ free: https://bit.ly/2OiW1kZ

For video licensing inquiries, contact: licensing@veritone.com

12 Comments

  1. It's an unstoppable and accelerating ecological decline. Enjoy what you have today.

  2. My neighbor is from Arizona and she loves the Mid West and the snowy winters here and she regrets not moving out of Arizona years ago! Arizona is a desert! Why do people live in a desert!? Because they have no knowledge of how perfect 4 seasons are in the Great Mid West! The states that get snow are the best places to live because of the water!

  3. Stop building or everyone will be short on water. Ban grass landscaping. Buy up cotton plantations and stop watering what can be grown in places like Alabama without irrigation. The same applies for pecans.

  4. They’re more worried about building more houses but not fixing the roads. Only if people knew where their tax dollars were going

Write A Comment

Pin