Nevada
Explore our guide as early voting for Nevada primaries begins
Early voting for the first election begins Saturday at voting areas scattered across the Las Vegas Valley and can proceed by way of June 10.
However that’s simply one of many methods you may take part within the election. Listed here are some widespread questions and solutions concerning the election.
Am I registered to vote? You’ll be able to verify your registration or make modifications to it on the Clark County Elections Division web site. You have to to supply your full title (because it seems in your voter registration kind) and the final 4 digits of your Social Safety quantity or your driver’s license.
What if I’m not registered but? When is the deadline? You’ll be able to register on-line on the Nevada secretary of state’s web site if you have already got a Nevada driver’s license or identification card. It’s also possible to register in individual at any metropolis clerk’s workplace, the DMV or the Clark County Elections Division. Should you don’t have a license or state ID card, you may mail in a voter registration software to the state or county. Extra details about registration is out there on-line.
Additionally, you may register to vote as much as and together with Election Day. However in case you register after June 1, you may’t vote by mail and should vote in individual. In that case, you can be allowed to vote utilizing a provisional poll, which might be counted solely after officers confirm your eligibility to vote.
How do I do know who’s operating in my space? Should you’re an energetic registered voter, the Clark County Elections Division ought to have despatched you a pattern poll that features the races through which you’re eligible to vote. Should you didn’t get a pattern poll, you may see the races on your space through the use of the identical hyperlink you’d use to verify your voter registration.
The place can I discover out extra details about the candidates? The Evaluation-Journal has written tales on virtually the entire races on the first poll, and yow will discover these tales on our web site. Additionally, we’ve requested all of the candidates operating for workplace to submit details about their campaigns and reply some primary questions. You’ll be able to see that info on-line as nicely.
How do I vote within the election? There are 3 ways to vote within the main. First, there’s mail-in voting. All energetic registered voters ought to obtain a mail poll by the top of the month. (Should you didn’t get one, you may contact the Elections Division at 702-455-VOTE (8683) or by emailing MailBallotRequest@ClarkCountyNV.gov.)
Should you would fairly not use a mail poll, you may vote in individual throughout early voting, at any variety of websites across the valley. An entire checklist is included in all pattern ballots however may also be discovered on-line. The county additionally has an app that may discover the closest early voting heart to you. You’ll be able to vote at any voting heart within the county, irrespective of the place you reside within the valley.
Lastly, in case you’re a traditionalist, you may vote in individual on election day at any voting heart. A listing of these facilities is on-line as nicely.
How do I vote utilizing a mail poll? You’ll obtain your mail poll, a secrecy sleeve and a return envelope in your packet. To vote, merely observe the directions and mark the suitable field subsequent to your alternative for a given workplace. You don’t should vote in each race; the votes you do forged will nonetheless depend, even when it’s just one race. Once you’re completed making your alternatives, place your accomplished poll into the secrecy sleeve, after which place that into the return envelope. Then, signal within the house supplied on the outdoors of the envelope. (These signatures might be matched to the signature you may have on file with the Elections Division to stop fraud.) In case your envelope isn’t signed, your vote might be put aside and never counted. In case your signature doesn’t match after being checked by a machine and an elections employee educated in signature verification, will probably be put aside and you can be contacted to make sure the poll is respectable.
Don’t put a couple of poll in a return envelope. A number of ballots despatched in a single envelope won’t be counted.
You’ll be able to mail your poll at any time as much as and together with main election day, however officers advocate you ship it in as quickly as potential. Solely ballots postmarked on or earlier than election day might be counted, and all ballots should be acquired by the county no later than the fourth day after the election, on this case June 18. Mailing your poll in early ensures your vote might be counted.
Additionally, in case you determine to make use of a mail poll, you may drop it off at any voting heart, in addition to on the metropolis halls of Boulder Metropolis, Henderson, Las Vegas, North Las Vegas and Mesquite, or the county’s Elections Division workplace at 965 Commerce Drive in North Las Vegas. Keep in mind, whether or not you mail in your poll or drop it off, you should signal the skin of the envelope.
How do I vote in individual, both throughout early voting or on election day? When you arrive at a voting heart, you’ll be requested on your title so elections staff can confirm your voting precinct. You’ll register on an digital pill and be handed a card to activate the voting machine. Insert the cardboard into the machine as proven, and your poll will seem. (You should utilize the contact display to vary the distinction, choose English, Spanish or Tagalog ballots, and to make the textual content bigger or smaller.)
To vote, choose the field subsequent to the title of your most well-liked candidate. Should you change your thoughts, contact the identical spot, and the poll will reset to will let you make a unique alternative. On the backside, you’ll see a “subsequent” button that may will let you transfer by way of a number of screens for the races through which you’re eligible to vote. It’s also possible to navigate “again” to earlier screens in case you so want. Once you’re completed, you will notice a evaluation display that shows your entire selections.
At that time, you’ll be requested to print your poll, and a scroll of paper might be displayed in a small printer subsequent to the machine, with a QR code on it. Verify to make sure the paper report matches your selections, and if it does, press the button marked “forged poll” on the display. The vote then might be recorded on the machine and on a drive that might be taken to elections headquarters to be counted. Not one of the voting machines is linked to the web to stop tampering.
Should you select to vote in individual, deliver your mail poll with you to the polls. Elections staff will stamp it “surrendered.” Should you don’t have it, you’ll be requested to signal a press release that you’ll not vote twice within the election (as soon as in individual and as soon as by mail), which is a felony.
Why don’t I see all of the races on my poll? Nevada is a closed main state, which implies solely Republicans can vote for candidates within the GOP main, and solely Democrats can vote for candidates of their main. Nonpartisan voters can solely vote on a handful of nonpartisan races within the main, corresponding to sheriff or metropolis council contests.
Within the common election, all voters will be capable of vote in all races.
Why don’t I see my standard member of Congress or state lawmaker on my poll anymore? The Nevada Legislature drew new district boundaries as required by regulation after the 2020 census, so your own home could have been positioned in a brand new district with totally different lawmakers than you had two years in the past. Your pattern poll will checklist your congressional district, state lawmakers, county fee district and metropolis wards.
What if I’ve different questions? Yow will discover solutions to many extra questions on-line on the Clark County Elections Division web site or the Nevada secretary of state’s web site.
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Contact Steve Sebelius at SSebelius@reviewjournal.com or 702-387-0253. Comply with @SteveSebelius on Twitter.
Nevada
Dams in quake-prone Nevada are vulnerable. Near Tahoe, the state is shoring one up – Carson Now
By Amy Alonzo — Dwarfed by drought, the warming climate and other, more immediate environmental threats, earthquakes aren’t at the forefront of most Nevadans’ minds.
But through the mid-20th century, Nevada was known as an earthquake state. While the state has experienced few sizable quakes since then, recent temblors have caught the attention of those who monitor earthquakes.
On Dec. 5, waves of water in the cave that houses rare Devil’s Hole pupfish in Death Valley National Park sloshed nearly 2 feet high after a 7.0 magnitude earthquake struck off the coast of California.
Just four days later, a 5.8 magnitude quake struck on an unnamed fault between Yerington and Silver Springs, shaking Northern Nevada and sending objects flying in some buildings.
Neither of the earthquakes resulted in any substantial damage — the California earthquake was too far offshore, while the Nevada quake had its epicenter in a remote area — but they are reminders that seismic activity could result in significant damage to the state’s aging infrastructure. It’s why state officials are proactively shoring up some of Nevada’s oldest earthen dams that, if shaken to the point of breaking, could cause water supply contamination for tens of thousands of people and deadly floods.
Earthquake magnitude is measured on a scale of 1 to 10, with damage starting to be visible around magnitude 5; by magnitude 6, buildings could see structural damage requiring repairs. Nevada experiences about one magnitude 6 earthquake per year, said Christie Rowe, director of the Nevada Seismological Laboratory at the University of Nevada, Reno, but almost always in a remote portion of the state.
If a magnitude 6 or greater earthquake were to occur in Las Vegas, Reno or another densely populated portion of the state, “there’s going to be a lot [of] impact,” Rowe said.
In the case of the recent earthquakes with epicenters in Yerington and off California’s coast, urban areas such as Reno were “pretty lucky,” Rowe said. “If either one had happened in a city, it would have been bad news.”
Inspections around the epicenter of the Lyon County earthquake revealed cracks in irrigation ditches and collapses on the banks of the Walker River but no damage to roads or bridges.
The quake was also a reminder to officials of the state’s seismic history and the need to beef up some of the hundreds of dams across Nevada, most constructed in the days before statewide engineering standards and made of dirt and other natural materials.
Damage from earthquakes is “definitely a concern,” said Keith Conrad, chief of dam safety at Nevada’s Division of Water Resources.
The state recently received federal funds to upgrade the dam at Marlette Lake, one of the oldest dams in the state. Marlette Lake perches on the rim between the Lake Tahoe Basin and Carson City, a popular mountain biking and hiking destination renowned for its fall colors and views down to Lake Tahoe. Its reservoir, restrained by an earthen dam estimated to be more than 150 years old, serves as the water source for multiple Northern Nevada counties and cities.
The state purchased the lake and its surrounding land in 1963, but now its aging infrastructure, combined with its location in an area of high seismic activity, makes it a “high hazard dam.” Annual inspections of the dam indicate a “high probability” of a breach if an earthquake of 6.5 magnitude or greater were to occur. If it breached, it could easily flood State Route 28, which runs between the dam and Lake Tahoe, and, with a sewage pipe running beneath the highway, damage to the highway could release sewage and debris into Lake Tahoe.
The seismic retrofit being done at Marlette should cover a lot of vulnerabilities that could affect the lake, caused by earthquakes or other events, Rowe said.
“If they know that dam is vulnerable, I’m really glad they’re doing preventative work,” she said. “It’s going to be way less expensive than if the dam failed.”
High hazard dams and federal emergency declarations
In 1915, the state experienced its largest earthquake, a 7.3 shaker near Winnemucca.
But there has been little high-magnitude shaking in urban areas since 1960, the exception being a magnitude 6 earthquake in the Wells area in 2008. But earthquake faults are still being discovered across the state (the Yerington-area quake occurred near no known faults) and there is still serious potential for earthquakes, especially in western Nevada.
In Lake Tahoe, there are multiple major fault lines that run beneath the lake, Rowe said, and the area is considered at high risk for earthquakes. While the state has been relatively free of any large quakes during the last few decades, Nevada has had the third most frequent number of large earthquakes in the last 150 years.
Lake Tahoe was created by seismic activity — earthquake faulting caused a portion of the mountains to drop, creating a giant bowl, and volcanic deposits dammed the bowl on its north side.
About 5,000 years ago, Lake Tahoe’s west shore experienced an earthquake large enough to produce a tsunami — and a tsunami-producing fault in the basin is overdue for an earthquake, scientists said more than a decade ago at an annual meeting of the American Geophysical Union.
Earthquakes occur every 3,000 to 4,000 years along the West Tahoe Fault that runs from beneath the lake up to the Echo Summit area. That fault last saw a major quake 4,500 years ago. The Incline Fault, located in the northeast portion of the lake, saw a quake of roughly magnitude 7 about 575 years ago.
During earthquakes, concern first focuses on injury and loss of life, said Rowe. But after that, effects to basic services and communications are of utmost concern, she said.
“The resilience of a community relies on the resilience of the water supply and the food supply,” she said. “It can take days or weeks to restore those kinds of services.”
It’s that focus on infrastructure that prompted the state to apply for a $10 million federal grant to upgrade Marlette Lake Dam to reduce the risk of a dam breach during an earthquake. The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) agreed the dam, listed as “high hazard,” warrants the work and issued the funding.
Nevada’s Division of Water Resources, the department Conrad staffs, oversees about 660 dams across the state; additional dams, such as those operated by the Bureau of Reclamation, Army Corps of Engineers and Bureau of Indian Affairs, do not fall under the division’s purview.
Few are concrete or rock masonry dams — most are earth embankment dams. Many of them are part of stormwater detention basins in Las Vegas or are small, privately owned structures used for irrigation in rural portions of the state (nearly half of the state’s dams are privately owned) but some are larger and in areas that could have substantial downstream effects if they failed, such as the dam at Marlette Lake.
The dams are categorized into “low,” “significant” and “high” hazard by how catastrophic their failure would be on downstream residents and infrastructure. While failure of low hazard dams are unlikely to have any substantial economic effects or cause death, failure of significant hazard dams are likely to cause substantial economic effects; failure of a high hazard dam is likely to lead to death.
Nearly a quarter of state-monitored dams, primarily in the Reno/Tahoe and Las Vegas areas, are considered “high hazard.” (The designation does not reflect the safety or condition of the dam.)
Nevada didn’t start regulating dams until 1955; “anything prior to that, we don’t know a whole lot about these dams, and chances are they were never engineered,” Conrad said. When it comes to Marlette Lake’s dam, built nearly a century before the state started regulating dams, “Who knows what techniques they used to build it. There’s a big old question mark on that portion of the dam.”
But the general state of dams within Nevada is pretty poor, Conrad said.
A 2018 report from the American Society of Civil Engineers ranked Nevada’s dams with a lowly grade of “D+” or “Poor: At Risk.”
A separate report issued by the National Inventory of Dams in 2023 echoed the 2018 findings, with the condition of the bulk of the dams included in the report listed as “fair” or “poor.”
“It’s hard to say exactly what the likelihood of failure is,” Conrad said.
In 2003, the state began drafting emergency action plans for all high and significant hazard-rated dams in the state.
“We are kind of ahead of the curve” compared with some other states, Conrad said.
Those plans have been activated occasionally, Conrad said, such as earlier this year at Angel Lake near Wells when cracks were found in the roughly 150-year-old dam. The seeping cracks created sinkholes on top of the dam, complicating repairs.
There has never been a federal emergency declaration in Nevada because of a dam failure in the state, but Nevada has seen multiple dam failures throughout the years.
The earliest documented dam failure in Nevada occurred in 1876, when an irrigation dam across the Humboldt River 22 miles east of Battle Mountain failed, releasing a large volume of water through the canyon and flooding several downstream ranches.
In 1955, an intense December storm dropped between 10 inches and 13 inches of rain in Northern Nevada, causing flooding along the Walker, Carson and Truckee rivers. Derby Dam on the Truckee River failed, and Hobart Dam outside Carson City failed and released water that severely damaged U.S. Route 395. Nearly $4 million in damages (roughly $44.2 million in 2022 dollars) was incurred and one person died.
Hobart Reservoir, also part of the Marlette Lake Water System, is next on the state’s list of dams to be repaired with federal funds, Conrad said.
— This story is used with permission of The Nevada Independent. Go here for updates to this and other Nevada Independent stories.
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Nevada
Air Force Veteran Tells the Story of Hidden Health Risks at Nevada Test Site
Dave Crete was sitting around with some fellow Air Force veterans he worked with almost three decades prior on the Nevada Test and Training Range when they broached the topic of tumors.
It was an unexpected conversation among the eight, but an enlightening one, said Crete, who found out six of his former crewmates had undergone tumor removal procedures. The Las Vegas resident said doctors had found more than 20 lipomas on him, including one that was the size of a grapefruit and surgically removed from his back.
The issues even extended to their families, with wives becoming sick, reporting multiple miscarriages or giving birth to children with defects or illnesses, Crete said.
He discovered the common thread between all these medical complications was exposure to radiation while working at the Nevada Test and Training Range.
Though veterans can usually get benefits to help with costs assumed from injuries related to service, Crete and many of his former crewmates can’t because their jobs were classified, meaning they can’t prove to the government that they were exposed to radiation.
Now, he’s working with federal lawmakers and producing a documentary to raise awareness about this group of impacted veterans.
“Our challenge is this: We’re a group of people that exists that nobody knows about, that nobody knows what we did, and nobody knows about where we worked,” Crete said. “It’s the only way I could figure out to effectively tell people our story and let them see it because there’s no Twin Towers; there’s no plane crash; no ship (got) sunk; there’s nothing to tie our story to, and so we have to create it, and that’s what we’ve been doing, creating a vehicle, if you will, to help us tell our story.”
Crete began the work in 2023 after forming his nonprofit The Invisible Enemy, a Las Vegas-based organization advocating for the thousands of military personnel that worked on the Nevada Test and Training Range and have been affected by exposure to toxic radiation.
The 2.9-million-acre Nevada Test and Training Range — formerly the Nevada Test Site — was established northwest of Las Vegas after World War II as a military testing site for nuclear weapons and now serves as “the largest contiguous air and ground space available for peacetime military operations,” according to Nellis Air Force Base.
Many people commonly refer to part of the range as Area 51, rumored to house top-secret U.S. military equipment and operations.
Crete worked at the Nevada Test and Training Range for four years, ending his service in 1987. He remembers testing being done near the gate where he was stationed. At the time, he and his crew members “didn’t know that’s what you could see,” he said, and were completely unaware of the issues that would follow them due to radiation exposure even when their service ended.
Crete said he would usually work for days at a time — sleeping, eating and drinking water while on the test site — and then go home to his wife, unknowingly bringing his contaminated clothing to be washed.
After discovering at the reunion how many veterans from the Nevada Test and Training Range ended up sick, Crete went digging for answers and found an environmental assessment of the Tonopah Test Range dated December 1975. It was conducted by the Department of Energy and Sandia National Laboratories.
The 89-page document stated that “The impacts of normal operation of the Tonopah Test Range consist of scarring of the land by roads and shrapnel impact, the use of resources and energy, noise, debris, some scattered toxic or radioactive materials, and economic effects on nearby communities.”
Three areas of the test site had been contaminated with plutonium from tests carried on in 1963, but the report stressed that “there is no indication of migration of this surface contamination outside the (site’s) fence, let alone outside the Range; nor is there any indication that this plutonium has entered significantly into local biological systems or food chains.”
“What they decided was that the benefits to national security, the benefits to having a prolific nuclear force, outweighed the future environmental liabilities … the government decided that the juice was worth the squeeze, and none of us knew,” Crete said. “You just never thought that the government would have actually put you somewhere knowing that eventually there was a good chance you were going to end up sick.”
Crete said he had since been in contact with “hundreds and hundreds” of veterans, with more than half reporting some sort of serious health condition among them or their families.
To raise awareness of the plight these veterans have faced, Crete decided he wanted to create a movie. He made an account on film industry website IMDb and began emailing those who were affiliated with projects like the 2023 “Oppenheimer” movie and the 2023 “Downwind” documentary.
He eventually received a response from a camera operator for “Downwind,” who connected him with the documentary’s directors, Mark Shapiro and Douglas Brian Miller. Crete then hired Backlot Docs — the feature documentary production company co-founded by Shapiro and Miller — to create the film.
“The Invisible Enemy” first fundraiser took place in late 2023 and filming began the same year to produce an 11-minute short titled “The Invisible Enemy: Hidden Sacrifice.” It took them three months from conceptualizing to completing the documentary, Crete said, and was uploaded to YouTube this past June.
Crete’s activism hasn’t stopped there.
The Invisible Enemy organization has been working with lawmakers, like U.S. Rep. Mark Amodei, R-Nev., to craft legislation that would help those exposed to radiation at the Nevada Test and Training Range get medical benefits.
On Sept. 16, 2024, Amodei and U.S. Rep Susie Lee, D-Nev., introduced the Presumption for Radiation or Toxin Exposure Coverage for Troops (PROTECT) Act in the U.S. House of Representatives, which would have provided medical care for veterans exposed to radiation and other toxins at the Nevada Test and Training Range by setting a “presumption of exposure” to these toxins starting in 1972.
The bill would have established that anyone who worked at the Nevada Test and Training Range during or after 1972 was presumably exposed to radiation or other toxins. It would cover those not included in Executive Order 13179, which was signed by former President Bill Clinton in 2000 to compensate civilians, their survivors and Department of Energy employees exposed to radiation.
“A quick look at the facts shows that this group of veterans were in serious need of additional support as a result of their service,” Amodei said in a September statement. “As with every veteran, those serving at (the test site) during the determined time frame are entitled to care for illness and injury sustained in the line of service to our nation. I’m glad to lead the charge on this and will continue to push until this change is actualized.”
The House proposal never came to a vote and died with the end of the 118th Congress. It would need to be reintroduced in the new session of Congress.
Crete, who travels to Washington every few months to advocate for the cause, believes they’ll be granted a hearing by Congress this year.
U.S. Rep. Dina Titus, D-Nev., in 2023 introduced the Providing Radiation Exposed Servicemembers Undisputed Medical Eligibility (PRESUME) Act to support veterans exposed to toxic radiation by prohibiting the secretary of Veterans Affairs from requiring evidence of a specific dose of radiation to determine whether someone is a radiation-exposed veteran.
Under the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act (RECA) established in the 1990s, civilians who contracted cancer and other specific diseases from exposure to radiation can receive compensation without having to go through testing required by the Veterans Affairs, said Shane Liermann, deputy national legislative director for the nonprofit organization, Disabled American Veterans.
A veteran must provide proof of on-site participation, radiation dose estimates from the Defense Threat Reduction Agency and a medical opinion supporting that their disease was caused by radiation exposure to receive entitlement for what Veterans Affairs considered “presumptive diseases” caused by radiation exposure.
But Crete claims that he and other veterans working at the Nevada Test and Training Range can’t even prove they were there due to their classified work, which leaves them unable to get any federal support.
Titus, in a statement, said “radiation dose estimates have historically been unreliable, leaving many exposed veterans unable to obtain the compensation they have earned.”
“In the course of their service, like anyone on the battlefield, veterans at the Nevada Test Site put themselves in harm’s way in service to our country. We cannot continue to leave any of them behind. The bureaucratic barriers to care could be easily fixed through my legislation,” Titus in 2023. “Our country’s atomic veterans helped win the peace during the Cold War, and they must be able to access the highest standard of care available.”
Titus’ bill was last referred to the Subcommittee on Disability Assistance and Memorial Affairs on Nov. 8, 2023. It never came to a vote.
Crete’s next moves will be to continue working with Nevada’s congressional delegation to draft and introduce legislation and create a full-length documentary for “The Invisible Enemy.”
He’ll show the short documentary at film festivals in Santa Fe, New Mexico, and New Jersey in the coming months. Meanwhile, filmmakers continue to gather footage for the longer feature.
The Invisible Enemy is also accepting donations on its website and fundraising through film showings in cities like Cleveland and New York. Crete said he would “speak to anybody and everybody that will listen, so I can tell our story, so that we can get the men and women what they need.”
“We all understand there’s risk, but it’s not reasonable to think that you’re going to be stationed out in the desert in Nevada and have a life-threatening illness, simply because that’s where you slept at night. And that’s what we’re trying to recognize and have the government recognize,” Crete said. “We got to participate in the coolest thing going that the military had, and I believe that there is a way to tell the story of this group of people and what they did and what we accomplished without violating our security. But it’s a story I just truly believe needs to be told, the good and the bad.”
___
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Nevada
Stanford loses commitment from Nevada OL Tyson Ruffins
Back on December 21st, Stanford football lost a commitment from Nevada transfer offensive lineman Tyson Ruffins, who announced on X (Twitter) that he was committing to Cal instead. Ruffins is a talented offensive lineman who is coming off a strong redshirt freshman season for the Wolfpack, making his loss significant for the Cardinal.
Ruffins has since deleted his tweet signaling his commitment to Cal while his commitment tweet to Stanford has stayed up. This has created some confusion of as to what his status is with respect to both Stanford and Cal. While I cannot speak for the Cal side of things, I can confirm that Ruffins has not flipped his commitment back to Stanford.
Stanford has since been looking to find other offensive line prospects who can take the spot that Ruffins was originally going to have. They were able to add one today in Georgia Tech transfer Kai Greer, who once verbally committed to Stanford as part of their 2024 class before flipping to Arkansas and then later flipping to Georgia Tech. Stanford extended an offer to him shortly after he entered the transfer portal at the end of December. I’ll share more thoughts on Greer in a separate article, so stay tuned for that.
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