58°F
weather icon Clear

Poll: Water supply tops Nevadans’ concerns

Ensuring there is enough water for the future is top of mind for the vast majority of residents in the nation’s driest state, according to a new bipartisan survey released Feb. 15.

In the latest Conservation in the West Poll, conducted by the Colorado College State of the Rockies Project, 90 percent of Nevadans said they support requiring local governments to determine whether there is enough water available before approving new residential development projects — the highest rate among the eight Western states surveyed — including 69 percent who said they would strongly support such a measure.

Nevadans expressed higher levels of concern over the availability of water supplies than most of their peers, which shouldn’t be too surprising considering that nearly three-quarters of the state’s population lives in Clark County, where Lake Mead’s bathtub ring sits as a stark omen of the West’s decades-long struggle with massive drought and chronic overuse of water along the Colorado River.

Low river levels were ranked as the most serious concern by Nevadans, with 81 percent calling it an extremely or very serious problem. That was even higher than concerns over the rising costs of living (76 percent) and gas prices (69 percent).

Concerns over inadequate water supplies (73 percent) and the drought (72 percent) rounded out the top five concerns for Nevadans out of the 14 issues surveyed.

“This year voters in Nevada have a lot on their minds, but they are not willing to trade one priority for another,” said Katrina Miller-Stevens, director of the State of the Rockies Project and an associate professor at Colorado College, in a statement.

Silver State residents are also overwhelmingly in favor of many of the conservation measures the poll asked about, including the construction of wildlife crossings over major highways, creating new national parks, national monuments and tribal protected areas.

Despite the rising costs of energy, 71 percent of Nevadans support moving away from fossil fuels as part of a gradual transition to getting 100 percent of energy from clean, renewable sources such as wind and solar over a 10-to 15-year period.

“High gas prices, increasing costs of living, and water shortage concerns are not enough to move Nevadans to reconsider their consistent support for conservation policies or seek out short-sighted solutions that put land and water at risk,” Miller-Stevens said.

The poll surveyed 3,413 people across eight states in English and Spanish from Jan. 5-22, with a minimum of 400 respondents from each state. The margin of error for the overall poll was 2.4 percentage points, and at most 4.9 percentage points for individual state results.

Contact Colton Lochhead at clochhead@reviewjournal.com. Follow @Colton Lochhead on Twitter.

https://www.scribd.com/document/626053206/Conservation-in-the-West-poll-NV-Results

MOST READ
LISTEN TO THE TOP FIVE HERE
THE LATEST
Flag football evens record with wins

Winning a pair of games this past week, Boulder City High School flag football advanced to 6-6 on the season.

Lady Eagles move up in standings

Winning a pair of league games this past week, Boulder City High School girls basketball jumped up to third place in the 3A league standings.

Celebrating America’s 250th anniversary with love

Every family likely celebrates love in a different manner during the holiday season, don’t they? Isn’t it likely that in this 250th year of our nation’s independence from Great Britain, America would celebrate love in a unique manner?

Eagles split a pair of games this week

Splitting a pair of league games this past week, Boulder City High School boys basketball sits in third place in the 3A league standings.

Downtown vitality is everyone’s business

Boulder City has always been a place that knows who it is.

Community effort

Despite cold temperatures and light rains, dozens of volunteers, including youth from the Nevada Civil Air Patrol and JROTC, helped remove thousands of wreaths that had been placed last month at the Southern Nevada Veterans Cemetery.

Dam Short Film Festival celebrates 22nd year

Movie lovers can enjoy Nevada’s largest film festival as the 22nd Annual Dam Short Film Festival returns to screen more than 150 short films over a six-day period, Feb. 11-16 in the Elaine K. Smith Building.