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  • 20
    Sep
    2012
    2:51pm, EDT

    With dramatic plan, Nevada asks battered universities to solve its economic crisis

    Courtesy R. Marsh Starks / UNLV Photo Services

    The campus at the University of Nevada Las Vegas, which would be affected by a dramatic proposed change in the way the state's public universities are funded.

    By Jon Marcus, The Hechinger Report

    LAS VEGAS — Just off the graveyard shift, Aaron Starks refuels with coffee in the early-morning quiet of the student union at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, steeling himself for his classes in electrical engineering.


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    Starks, who’s 27 and raising a 19-month-old daughter, is in his third year at UNLV, persevering in the face of not only sleeplessness but deep state budget cuts that have forced courses to be canceled, programs eliminated, faculty furloughed and services exasperatingly scaled back — all while tuition has soared.

    Many other students in Nevada, however, are giving up. In this world-famous gaming capital, the odds are stacked against them. Just 36 percent earn their four-year degrees within even six years, a smaller proportion than in any state except Alaska. And as tuition rises, enrollment has been falling. That, accompanied by an exodus of college-educated workers, has further shrunk the proportion of 25- to 34-year-olds in this state with degrees, already the lowest in the country.

    When Starks is finished, he intends to leave, too.

    “I don’t anticipate staying in Nevada,” he says. “If I find the right job, sure. But what I would like to do isn’t here.”


    Can colleges lead the state?
    A poster child for the financial predicament in which public colleges and universities find themselves — and the degree to which education is connected to economic vitality in 21st-century America — Nevada is now proposing a dramatic turnaround under which it hopes this same battered public higher-education system will help lead it out of economic crisis.

    By changing the formula under which colleges and universities are funded, policymakers plan to reward institutions for turning out graduates and research that can build new industries in a state that has proven far too vulnerable to downturns in the dominant areas of gaming and construction.

    A Brookings Institution report last year found Nevada overly dependent on a consumption economy acutely prone to booms and busts, with “substantial” shortages of skilled workers and too little investment in innovation. Six of the top 10 employers are casinos.

    As in other places, lawmakers in Nevada have now come to see higher education as a solution to these problems. And with the nation’s worst unemployment and home-foreclosure rates, it’s an ideal laboratory to test this idea.


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    “The economy has swung more from the top to the bottom here in Nevada than in any other state,” says Steve Hill, executive director of the Governor’s Office of Economic Development. “And we think it’s important that education and research help lead Nevada back.”

    State Sen. Steven Horsford, a Democrat who chaired the committee that recommended the new funding formula, puts it more succinctly. “We have nowhere to go but up,” he says.

    Focus on credits completed
    If approved by the full Legislature and the governor, the change would mean that all taxpayer money for colleges and universities would be divided up beginning next year based not on how many students they enroll, but how many credits those students successfully complete.

    “We want to fund institutions based on student success,” Horsford says.

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    The plan would also provide financial incentives for universities to concentrate on fields that could help revive Nevada’s economy, including natural resources and conservation, engineering, biological and biomedical sciences, architecture, and nursing.

    “The performance part is to drive decision-making toward what’s important to the state,” says Assemblywoman Heidi Gansert, a Republican on Horsford’s committee. Adds Daniel Klaich, chancellor of the Nevada System of Higher Education: “We need to incentivize our institutions to produce degrees with value.”

    That’s unique among the several states that have instituted so-called “performance funding” for their public colleges and universities, says Martha Snyder, an education-policy specialist at HCM Strategists and a former U.S. Department of Education policy adviser who specializes in this topic.

    “There’s an increasing understanding by leaders that higher education is an important tool, but that there need to be readjustments within higher-education systems to help states meet their economic goals,” Snyder says. “They want to be sure that their investments are driving toward what their states need in terms of helping their economies grow. The Nevada approach is the first to tie that to specific industries.”

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    But while the plan would alter the way existing money is parceled out, it won’t necessarily add any new funding. Since the state collects no personal or corporate income tax, and sales taxes are only incrementally recovering from the economic downturn, there’s little chance that higher-education spending will soon increase.

    Rescuing the budget-cutters
    Many Nevada university administrators and faculty are in favor of the change regardless, because, among other reasons, it gives them more control over the proceeds from tuition, which now go into a central fund and are redistributed around the state — meaning students at large urban institutions end up subsidizing their counterparts at small, rural ones. But the irony is not lost on them that they’re being asked to come to the rescue of the same leaders who have deeply reduced their budgets.

    “ ‘We’ve cut the heck out of you, but, oh, guess what? Now we really need you to be the engine of the economy,’ ” says Neal Smatresk, president of UNLV, where funding is down 40 percent, or more than $73 million, since 2008, forcing the elimination of 740 faculty and staff positions, 15 academic departments and 31 degree programs. “ ‘Quick, help us build a new economy.’ There’s a little irony here, or maybe a big irony, which is that no one seems to have any long-term memory.”

    The tension between wanting more from higher education while paying less for it is not unique to his state, Smatresk says. It’s a national phenomenon. “There’s no question that policy leaders are looking to higher education to lead the way out. There’s a tacit understanding that higher education is absolutely critical.”

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    In the case of Nevada, the state needs new and different industries, and “the honey-pot that draws in those industries is people who can help them with their R&D,” says Smatresk. “The other piece they need is the workforce, so they need to know we have the capacity to generate those people for them.”

    Nevada’s worst-in-the-nation plight means the role played by its colleges and universities is particularly challenging — and crucial — making it, as Smatresk says, “the canary in the mine shaft of higher education.”

    In Nevada, that canary is already in intensive care. The state has never made higher education much of a priority. On the wall of his office, Smatresk has photos of the few buildings on the original UNLV campus of the early 1960s, then an outpost in the desert derided as “Tumbleweed Tech.” Recent cuts have made things worse.

    Sobering numbers
    Fewer than two of every five UNLV students earn bachelor’s degrees within six years, according to the National Center for Higher Education Management Systems. And just 10.8 percent of full-time community-college students in Nevada get their two-year degrees in three years, the organization Complete College America reports.

    When nearly 60 percent of jobs will require a career certificate or college education by 2020, the Census Bureau reports that only 29.5 percent of 25- to 34-year-olds in Nevada have one — the lowest proportion in the country, and falling. Yet as tuition has increased 160 percent over the last 10 years to help make up for state budget cuts, enrollment in the state’s public universities has dropped sharply. Last year, the number of students was down 7.7 percent statewide.

    Back to school and burdened with debt

    Meanwhile, many college-educated people left when the economic downturn hit Nevada hard. And soon-to-be graduates like Starks see little incentive to stay, with 53.6 percent of degree-holders under 25 unemployed or underemployed, according to a recent analysis by Northeastern and Drexel universities and the Economic Policy Institute.

    “No student in his right mind would stay in a Nevada with a 53 percent unemployment rate for grads,” says Mark Ciavola, undergraduate student body president at UNLV. Yet when educated people leave, so do the prospects for the kind of innovation that could bring new industries and create jobs. “It’s a chicken-or-the-egg scenario,” Ciavola says. “This is a circular cluster we’re sitting in right now.”

    The new performance-funding proposal seeks to use the universities to break this cycle.

    “There are those of us who believe we cannot diversify the economy into the economy of the future without a more robust public higher-education system that not only invests more over time, but aligns itself in the right way with the jobs we’re trying to create,” Horsford says.

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    • Could raising salaries be the best way to attract and keep better teachers?
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    Still, a “knowledge fund” set up by the Legislature to encourage research that can be commercialized has no money in it; the state board of regents has asked for $10 million for this purpose — a tiny sum when compared to similar efforts in states including neighboring Utah, whose Utah Science Technology and Research initiative, or USTAR, got $179 million, plus $15 million in ongoing annual funding for research teams at the University of Utah and Utah State University, and $160 million toward the construction of $200 million in new research facilities at those schools.

    Some faculty also worry that, in their desire to meet the new state goals, colleges and universities will simply make it easier for students to complete their courses.

    Smatresk disagrees. “Tell a faculty member they have to cheapen their degrees and see how they respond,” he says. “You don’t game degrees.”

    “Bull,” responds Sondra Cosgrove, former faculty senate chair at the College of Southern Nevada, who teaches Nevada history. Although she says she wouldn’t lower her own standards, Cosgrove fears that other long-suffering faculty might.

    Read more education stories from The Hechinger Report on NBCNews.com

    “We haven’t had pay raises in four years,” she says. “If you say, ‘You still don’t get a raise unless we improve student success,’ there are a lot of things faculty will do. When people are facing foreclosures on their houses, there are a lot of things they’ll do.”

    Besides, she says, for all of the anticipation about it, the performance-funding plan won’t pump more money into public higher education (though her own college will benefit, to the tune of several million dollars, from the new distribution formula).

    “We’re not talking about extra funding,” Cosgrove says. “We’re talking about base funding. We have to compete now for the money we already get.”

    This story, "Nevada asks battered universities to solve its economic crisis," was produced by The Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, nonpartisan education-news outlet based at Teachers College, Columbia University.

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    37 comments

    OMG....the home of Harry Reid....wants to fund education based on...wait for it....RESULTS!!!!! You must be joking.

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  • 17
    Sep
    2012
    5:38pm, EDT

    $7 million in gold found in dead Nevada man's home

    The Appeal via Nevada DMV

    Walter Samaszko Jr.

    By Isolde Raftery, NBC News

    When Walter Samaszko Jr. died at his home in Carson City, Nev., he had $200 in a bank account. But as officials later discovered, Samaszko had about $7 million stored neatly around his home, the Nevada Appeal reported.

    In late June, neighbors called authorities because of a smell emanating from Samaszko’s home. He was a recluse who had told them he hated the government and feared getting shots, but still, it had been a while since they had seen him, according to the Appeal.

    According to the coroner, Samaszko, 69, had been dead for at least a month. He died of heart problems, the Las Vegas Sun reported.


    In came the cleanup crews, which discovered boxes of gold in the garage.

    “At that point, we took the house apart,” said Carson City clerk-recorder Alan Glover.

    They found gold coins and bullion, tiny dos-pesos, $20 gold pieces, Austrian ducats, Kruggerrands and English Sovereigns dating  to the 1840s – enough gold to fill two wheelbarrows.

    Samaszko and his mother had lived in the three-bedroom home since the 1970s, which is around the time they started collecting gold. Glover told the Appeal that the two kept detailed records of the gold they had purchased.


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    As for who can lay claim to the riches -- Glover said the Internal Revenue Service will take a sizable amount in taxes -- about $750,000 -- and that the rest will likely go to a first cousin, a substitute teacher in San Rafael, Calif., who is Samaszko's only relative as far as authorities can tell.

    The Las Vegas Sun reported that Glover's office found her using a list of people who had attended Samaszko's mother's funeral.

    Samaszko's home is currently for sale for $105,000.

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    705 comments

    why should the IRS take the gold? Its not theirs

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  • 15
    Aug
    2012
    11:21am, EDT

    Man drops gun in movie theater, shooting self in buttocks

    By Andrew Mach, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Police say a man accidentally shot himself in the buttocks at a Nevada movie theater during a showing of “The Bourne Legacy.”


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    The moviegoer was at the Century 14 theater Tuesday night when a gunshot rang out.

    After receiving several calls reporting seven to eight shots, police in Sparks, Nev., dispatched police units as well as fire and medical crews only to find out one shot was fired by accident.

    Witnesses inside the theater told officers the gun fell from the man’s pocket as he was adjusting himself in the seat, and it fired when it dropped to the floor, striking him in the buttocks.


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    The 56-year-old man then reportedly stood up, apologized to those around him and left the theater before police arrived. He checked himself into a nearby VA hospital in Reno, where he was treated for a gunshot wound to his buttocks, according to a police report. His injury is not considered to be life-threatening. 

    Police say there was no panic in the theater and that only five people reported hearing the gunshot out of the approximately 30 people in the audience. No one else on the scene was injured.

    Police said the man has a valid permit to carry a concealed firearm.  

    Watch the most-viewed videos on NBCNews.com

    The case will be forwarded to the Sparks City Attorneys’ Office when the police investigation is complete. 

    Sparks City Attorney Chet Adams told NBC News the fact that the man had a concealed weapons permit places a higher standard of responsibility on him.

    “You’re supposed to know the laws, you’re supposed to be vigilant in carrying that weapon, and you’re supposed to be trained to use that weapon,” Adams said.

    Adams also noted that a revised statute in Nevada would warrant a misdemeanor offense for anyone who negligently discharges or causes to be discharged a firearm in public, and, therefore, he said, “I would certainly be inclined to prosecute.”

    “The potential for harm is very strong whenever the discharge of a firearm occurs,” Adams said. “That’s something you can’t ignore. Obviously there was a round chambered and [the man] was in a public place. Those circumstances warrant charges very seriously.”

    The incident in Nevada comes less than a month after a mass-shooting inside a movie theater in Aurora, Colo., that left 12 dead and 58 injured. 

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    629 comments

    Shot himself in the butt, eh? I'm guessing that caused him to suffer a traumatic brain injury.

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  • 26
    Jul
    2012
    5:20am, EDT

    Window washers stranded for hours outside Las Vegas hotel's 35th floor

    By NBC News and wire reports

    Four window washers were rescued by firefighters Wednesday after they were stranded for several hours in searing heat outside the 35th floor of a Las Vegas Strip high-rise hotel.

    Clark County and Las Vegas firefighters spent three hours rigging ropes and descending from the roof of the 46-story Vdara Hotel to harness and lower the workers one at a time to a landing area below.


    Clark County spokeswoman Stacey Welling said firefighters were summoned about noon after the men reported that their work platform appeared to be slipping.

    No injuries were reported. Three of the men rescued were in their 40s and one was in his 20s, NBC's Las Vegas affiliate KSNV reported.

    Mechanical malfunction
    The Vdara is one of several glassy CityCenter complex hotels built by MGM Resorts International and Dubai World. The surrounding 67-acre development opened in December 2009, with the Aria, Veer and Mandarin Oriental hotels, a casino and the upscale Crystals shopping and restaurant complex. The flawed Harmon hotel and condominium tower never opened.


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    Hotel spokeswoman Yvette Monet said the workers' platform apparently stalled due to a mechanical malfunction.

    Battalion Chief Eric Poleski of the Clark County Fire Department told NBC's Las Vegas affiliate KSNV that this kind of rescue was not as common as it once was but that firefighters still train regularly for similar situations.

    More coverage of this story on NBC's Las Vegas affiliate KSNV

    "Las Vegas hasn't been building things quite as much as they used to. When CityCenter was being built we were doing this (type of rescue) at a fairly regular basis. ... But it's been quite a while since we've done something like this on a side of a building," he told KSNV.

    KSNV

    The rescue of the four window washers in Las Vegas on Wednesday played out on live television.

    Soaring temperatures
    The first firefighter to reach the men brought bottled water, officials said. The National Weather Service reported temperatures at 104 degrees and winds a moderate 10 mph at nearby McCarran International Airport at the time.

    Television viewers watched the rescue live on local television.

    Complete US news coverage on NBCNews.com

    In March 2009, firefighters rescued two window washers who suffered minor injuries when a cable holding their platform snapped during gusty winds outside the Wynn Resorts-owned Encore Las Vegas.

    Both men were wearing safety harnesses, and were pulled to safety through a 15th-floor window, while the platform slammed against windows facing the Vegas Strip and rained broken glass onto a swimming pool area below.

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    45 comments

    Firefighters deserve more credit than they ever receive they are the best

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  • 19
    Jul
    2012
    11:59am, EDT

    55 years ago, 6 stood under atomic bomb blast -- on purpose

    On July 19, 1957, five men stood at Ground Zero of an atomic test that was being conducted at the Nevada Test Site. This was the test of a 2KT (kiloton) MB-1 nuclear air-to-air rocket launched from an F-89 Scorpion interceptor. The nuclear missile detonated 10,000 ft above their heads.

    Watch on YouTube
    By Jim Gold, NBC News

    Fifty-five years ago today, five Army officers and a photographer stood directly under a 2-kiloton atomic blast at the Nevada Test Site, about 65 miles northwest of Las Vegas, and survived.


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    The five officers, who volunteered for the duty, and the cameraman, who did not, designated the July 19, 1957, test site with a hand-lettered sign as “Ground Zero, Population 5,” KPLU, a Seattle/Tacoma-based NPR station, said in a story marking the 55th anniversary of the blast.

    The intent of the Cold War test was to film the officers surviving the blast and convince U.S. military leaders of the time that using low-grade nuclear missiles in the air would be relatively safe for people on the ground, KPLU reported.


    A movie, obtained from government archives by AtomCentral.com, shows two F-89 jets zooming into view and one shooting off the missile carrying the atomic warhead. The officers are shown waiting during a countdown for the missile to detonate 18,500 feet above them. One officer, wearing sunglasses, looks up as the warhead explodes, at first in silence, followed by a roar, after which the sky goes black and the air turns to fire.

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    The movie narrator shouts: “It’s happened! The mounds are vibrating. It is tremendous. Directly above our heads!”

    KPLU said the film was shot at the direction of  Col. Arthur B. "Barney" Oldfield, public information officer for the Continental Air Defense Command in Colorado Springs.

    KPLU listed the test participants as Col. Sidney Bruce, Lt. Col. Frank P. Ball, Maj. Norman "Bodie" Bodinger, Maj. John Hughes, Don Lutrel, and photographer George Yoshitake.

    KPLU said it looked for death records on the five officers and said that as far as it could determine, at least two of them lived relatively long lives.

    The test was one of many that the government conducted with live participants in close proximity to nuclear blasts or to ground zero directly after explosions. In a 2010 interview in The New York Times, Yoshitake spoke about the effect of the tests on cameramen like himself who chronicled the events.

    “Quite a few have died from cancer,” said Yoshitake, then 82. “No doubt it was related to the testing.”

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    339 comments

    In the mid 1940's, after the war, soldiers & sailors were given points allowing them to leave the Service early if they would volunteer to watch Atomic Explosions at the Marshall Islands.

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  • 3
    Jun
    2012
    10:13pm, EDT

    Air tanker crashes while battling Utah blaze

    Forest fires continue to rage in the Southwest, where two pilots were killed over the weekend when the air tanker they were flying crashed near the Utah-Nevada border. An hour later, another air tanker was forced to make a belly landing outside Reno, Nev., when landing gear malfunctioned. NBC's Miguel Almaguer reports.

    By msnbc.com staff and NBC News

    Updated at 8:10 a.m. ET: An air tanker fighting the White Rock wildfire in southern Utah crashed Sunday afternoon, killing two crew members.

    A fire official told NBC News that the crash occurred shortly before 1 p.m. local time in a remote area on the Utah side of the border with Nevada. Iron County Sheriff's deputies reached the scene and confirmed the crew members had died, the Salt Lake City Tribune reported. An investigation team was en route to the location, Chris Hanefeld, PIO for the White Rock fire, told NBC News.

    The plane was a P-2V tanker operated by Neptune Aviation Services in Missoula, Mont., a statement from the Bureau of Land Management said.

    Earlier, a fire bomber made a successful emergency landing at Minden-Tahoe Airport in Nevada, Reno television station MyNews4.com reported.

    In a statement issued Sunday afternoon, Nevada Governor Brian Sandoval said the "thoughts and prayers of all Nevadans are with the firefighters, the plane crews and their families."

    In New Mexico, firefighters battling the state's largest-ever blaze gained ground and officials said they would begin to allow evacuated residents to return home on Monday, Reuters reported.

    The Whitewater-Baldy wildfire, which began as two small blazes, is now out control and has blown into the largest wildfire in state history. NBC's Miguel Almaguer reports.

    The Whitewater-Baldy Complex fire, which has burned 241,701 acres in the Gila National Forest, is now 17 percent contained with progress being made by the hour, Fire Information Officer Heather O'Hanlon told Reuters.

    53 comments

    Flying wildfire aircraft is one of the most dangerous jobs there is. Our gratitude to those lost and condolences to the families.

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  • 22
    May
    2012
    9:55pm, EDT

    Wildfire burns homes and forces evacuations near Gardnerville, Nev.

    Photos by Cathleen Allison / AP

    Firefighters battle a wildfire south of Gardnerville, Nev. On May 22, 2012. The fast-moving blaze near the Nevada-California line destroyed at least two homes on Tuesday as it forced evacuations and sent up huge plumes of black smoke, witnesses said.

    Firefighters battle a wildfire south of Gardnerville, Nev., on Tuesday.

    The Record-Courier reports:

    Firefighters are battling a wildfire that is threatening more than 100 homes in the southern Douglas County Community of Topaz Ranch Estates.

    The fire was reported at 1:39 p.m. as burning in heavy fuel between homes. Structures were confirmed burning.

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    Comment

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  • 28
    Apr
    2012
    7:24am, EDT

    Man faces charges in bloody hammer killings of Las Vegas woman and daughter

    AP

    Bryan Clay, arrested Friday on child abuse charges and charged Saturday in connection with the murders of 38-year-old Ignacia Martinez and 10-year-old Karla Martinez.

    By The Associated Press

    Updated at 5:30 p.m. ET: LAS VEGAS -- Using a hammer as a weapon, a "complete stranger" with no significant criminal history allegedly attacked a family in their Las Vegas home, killing a woman and her daughter, in a brutal crime that left investigators both baffled and aghast.

    Bryan Clay, 22, was arrested Friday in the April 15 rape and bludgeoning deaths of 38-year-old Ignacia Martinez and 10-year-old Karla Martinez. He had no connection to the family of five, Lt. Ray Steiber said Saturday.


    "This was a complete stranger killing a mother and daughter and attacking the father," Steiber told The Associated Press. "I've been doing this (police work) 24 years, and you don't see cases like this. I can't even put this into words."

    Nothing was taken from the blood-spattered house, and investigators were unsure of the motive for the attack.

    "There's no rhyme or reason to why (it happened)," he said, adding Clay doesn't have a "significant" criminal history.

    Clay also was booked in the beating and rape of a 50-year-old woman in the same west Las Vegas neighborhood hours before the slayings.

    Steiber said he didn't know why two boys, 9 and 4, were spared in the home invasion attack that came to light when the older boy told school officials next day that his mother and sister were dead at home.

    Arturo Martinez, 39, the husband and father, was critically injured in the attack and remains hospitalized with head injuries. He has been unable to talk to investigators. Both the mother and daughter were sexually assaulted, Steiber said.'

    In the earlier attack, the 50-year-old woman was walking near an intersection when an assailant forced her into a nearby desert area and violently sexually assaulted her April 15. "(She was) chased, beaten and raped," Steiber said.

    DNA results linked Clay to both attacks, investigators said. A baseball cap left behind by the woman's attacker turned out to be a key piece of evidence, KLAS-TV reported.

    Authorities found the bodies of the girl and the mother in separate bedrooms. The two boys remained in the home for at least 24 hours with the bodies and their severely injured father, Steiber said.

    Police were notified about the case the next day after the 9-year-old boy came to school and informed a counselor that his mom and sister were dead. The boys were placed in protective custody with the Clark County Department of Family Services after the attack, and police declined to say where they now are.

    "They're safe and OK," Steiber said.

    Police made the case a top priority as up to 60 investigators were involved. "Our goal was to get this guy into custody, and we weren't going to stop until we did," Steiber said.

    Steiber said he didn't know if Clay had a lawyer, and attempts to reach a police spokeswoman were unsuccessful.

    Clay was being held without bail Saturday pending an initial court appearance. He was booked on various charges, including murder, battery with a deadly weapon and sexual assault.

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    705 comments

    First, lock him up in general population and let it be known that he raped a 5th grader. Don't worry about a death penalty because he will be a fun toy for an entire gang. By the way he wears his pants below his buttocks, he is ready for prison service.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: murder, nevada, las-vegas, featured, bryan-clay, crime-and-courts, ignacia-martinez
  • 19
    Mar
    2012
    2:30pm, EDT

    Nevada's modern-day gold rush creates new mining jobs

    In Elko, Nev., combat veterans and hundreds of others are finding work in the mines now that gold prices have reached record highs. NBC's Kristen Dahlgren reports.

    By Alissa Figueroa
    NBC News

    ELKO -- In almost every way Nevada is still reeling from the recession. It has the highest unemployment rate in the country at almost 13 percent, and one of the highest foreclosure rates. But in the northeast corner of the state, almost 500 miles from the Vegas strip, life is suddenly very good.

    In Nevada's gold country the global boom that’s pushed gold prices to an all-time high – currently hovering around $1,700 per ounce -- brought an influx of jobs to mining towns like Elko, Nev., population 18,000.

    Devin Judy can attest to that. The 22-year-old combat veteran landed a steady job driving one of the massive trucks that hauls thousands of pounds of earth at the Newmont Mining Corporation’s Gold Quarry mine, just 26 miles outside Elko.

    Devin Judy, 22, a combat veteran, has landed a steady job driving trucks that haul thousands of pounds of earth at the Newmont Mining Corporation's Gold Quarry mine.

    Judy was unemployed for three months after returning from a deployment to Iraq with the Idaho National Guard.

    “[I was] trying to find my place back in society, trying to provide for my family, provide a better lifestyle and trying to progress in life,” said Judy. “We were worried about all those things.”

    There were few permanent, steady jobs back in Idaho. “No careers,” he said, sitting near his 22-foot-tall truck at the mine. “This is a career.”

    Judy makes around $60,000 a year hauling dirt and rocks speckled with microscopic flecks of gold through the mine (there’s 130 tons of dirt for every ounce of gold the mine produced). That’s enough money to comfortably support his young family -- a wife and 18-month-old daughter who relocated with him from Idaho Falls two and a half months ago.

    Judy is one of about 30 military veterans recruited last year to work at the Newmont mines that surround Elko. Newmont brought on about 600 employees in 2011, and is expecting to make another 600 hires this year.

    In Elko, Nev., the high price of gold has created a bevy of mining jobs.

    “It's a nice place to be,” said Richard Martinez, a vice president of human resources for Newmont. “It makes for an exciting atmosphere, that’s for sure, compared to some of the other things going on in this country.”

    Would-be miners face tough competition for jobs, housing

    Leading a jobs boom is not without challenges. With the average salary for a metal mine worker in Nevada around $86,000, thousands are clamoring for these jobs -- some 34,000 people applied for the 600 positions that opened in Newmont’s Nevada mines last year. Finding the highly skilled workers needed for many mining positions has led recruiters to military bases across the country, where they can find veterans fresh from tours in Iraq and Afghanistan who have extensive heavy machinery training.

    Newmont is also recruiting workers from closing mine sites (as far away as Missouri and Tennessee), and has a partnership with six research universities to attract and train engineers and geologists.

    But finding housing in Elko for the new arrivals has proven more difficult than finding qualified workers. The four RV parks in town are booked solid, as are most of the motels, originally built to house tourists visiting local casinos.

    At Double-Dice RV Park, the largest in town, all but 13 of the park’s 143 spots are reserved for long-term guests, some staying as long as six months to a year while they work at the mine. Normally, said owner Dean Vavak, only 90 or so of the park’s spaces are booked for long-term stays.

    “We get calls all the time,” said Vavak. “We have to turn people away, actually.” In fact, his park is running a wait-list for long-term tenants.

    Mining companies invest in Elko

    Elko Mayor Chris Johnson knows the housing shortage is something his government has to take on for Elko to grow sustainably. But getting financing from banks to build big developments has been a challenge, he said. This is still Nevada, after all, the epicenter of the nation’s housing crisis. And there’s always the possibility that gold prices could plummet, as they did in the early 2000s, when gold went down to $250 an ounce, and the mines shed workers.

    “We're based on mining; it’s well over 50 percent of our economy,” said Johnson. “There's no question that if it plummets and the mines just couldn't make the ends meet that it's going to affect Elko.”

    The mining companies, however, are willing to invest in Elko’s growth. Developer Pedro Ormaza was asked by another company working in the area, Barrick Gold Corporation, to build a 200-unit apartment complex on the outskirts of town to help alleviate the housing crunch. Barrick is funding the project.

    “As soon as I get a building built it's occupied the next day, with people usually leaving a motel room,” said Ormaza. “[They’re] moving up from a motel room to an apartment, and hopefully in the future they can move into a house.”

    That’s the future that Devin Judy, the veteran-turned-mine-worker, sees for himself and his family in Elko. Judy is renting a house a half-hour drive from the mine, after spending his first three weeks in town in a motel room with his wife and baby. But they just got a new puppy, and hope to buy their own home in the next six months.

    “I feel fortunate. That's for sure,” said Judy. “I know a lot of Americans out there don't.”

    201 comments

    So they're recruiting military vets for jobs working with heavy machinery? Couldn't they be charged with, "solicitation of a miner"? Yuk yuk yuk...

    Show more
    Explore related topics: gold, mining, gold-rush, nevada, featured, elko, housing-shortage, mining-jobs
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