Vegas Heat Plan Springs a Leak on Water and Cooling

Nevada leaders are racing to keep people safe from brutal heat, but they are still working through a very basic question: where can residents reliably find cold water and a place to cool down. Counties across the state are rolling out tree giveaways, heat inventories and pop-up cooling sites, yet lawmakers and community groups told a joint legislative committee this spring that many plans still lack clear, operational details for public drinking water and round-the-clock cooling. That gap puts long-term tree canopy goals out in front of short-term, life-saving services for the neighborhoods that need them most.

AB 96, the 2025 law that requires counties with populations of 100,000 or more to include a heat-mitigation element in their master plans, spells out tools such as public cooling spaces, public drinking water and shade over paved surfaces. As outlined by the Nevada Legislature, the statute takes effect July 1, 2026 and applies to Clark and Washoe counties.

On the ground in Southern Nevada, Clark County’s “Stay Cool” program is leaning heavily on trees and other resources in the hottest neighborhoods. According to All-In Clark County, the county has given away about 4,500 trees since fall 2024 and uses a regional heat resource map to help target plantings and outreach.

Cooling Centers And Water Access Remain Patchy

County officials reactivated dozens of cooling stations during a mid-March heat spike, but many of those locations only open during declared high-heat events or keep limited hours, according to Clark County. Local reporting by KNPR described how those short activations still left evening and overnight gaps. Lawmakers and advocates say that kind of patchwork leaves at-risk residents without dependable access to hydration and refuge when temperatures stay high after dark.

Trees Aren’t A Quick Fix

Building tree canopy is central to Nevada’s long-term heat strategy, but trees take years to deliver street-level cooling and typically require steady irrigation in a desert climate. The Regional Transportation Commission’s heat-mapping project, done with local partners and community science surveys, has pinpointed neighborhoods with the worst heat exposure and helped prioritize where trees should go, as shown on the RTC heat maps. Those maps, along with local tree inventories, underscore that planting alone is not enough and that new canopy needs to be paired with near-term measures such as clearly mapped water refill points and extended hours at cooling sites.

Reno, Washoe Face Different Needs

Officials in Washoe County say rural and urban communities will need different kinds of responses, and they have opened a public comment period to help shape their heat-mitigation element. This Is Reno reports that the county is soliciting input as it prepares to fold heat strategies into master planning for Reno, Sparks and surrounding areas…

Story continues

TRENDING NOW

LATEST LOCAL NEWS