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Nevada City considers adding six surveillance cameras to city streets

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Nevada City considers adding six surveillance cameras to city streets


Concerns rise over Nevada City’s consideration of new surveillance cameras

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Concerns rise over Nevada City’s consideration of new surveillance cameras

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NEVADA CITY — Nevada City is considering adding new surveillance cameras on its streets to help with safety and security.

The company providing the cameras is already under scrutiny by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).

The Hat Store owner Todd Wahoske is in favor of the Nevada City police department’s plan to add six new security cameras on city streets for proactive policing. Wahoske says the Merchant Association reports an increase in crime in the past six months.

“As a business owner, maybe I’ve come to appreciate security a little bit more,” Wahoske said. “But you know, any time you’re a small business owner and somebody walks out with something, it’s ‘you’re pretty bummed out, you feel violated.’ It’s not a good feeling at all.”

The cameras would be installed by a company called Flock. Nevada City’s system would not use the company’s license plate reading functions recently approved in the cities of Stockton and Tracy.

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CBS13 spoke with Tracy police about their new Flock contract in early September.

“Our goal, ideally, is to have every agency in our county to be this type of license plate reader database because criminals bounce between borders,” Tracy Police Lieutenant Timothy Bauer said.

The ACLU, citing privacy concerns, recently released a report on Flock reading, in part:

“If the police or government leaders are pushing for Flock or another centralized mass-surveillance ALPR system in your community, we urge you to oppose it, full stop. “

In Nevada City, the cameras without license plate readers would be added on Broad Street, Pioneer Park, and undetermined criminal hot spots. In this small city, cameras could now keep watch.

“I would like to think whoever is doing this is probably doing it for a very good reason and it’s not to be used in an abusive way,” Wahoske said.

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The city council will vote on whether to add these cameras to their streets Wednesday night.



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45 from Nevada deploying to help in Hurricane Helene aftermath

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45 from Nevada deploying to help in Hurricane Helene aftermath


About 45 Southern Nevadans are headed to assist with recovery efforts in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene.

Nevada Task Force-1 is one of 28 Federal Emergency Management Administration teams that have been activated to assist efforts in the storm area. The team left Las Vegas about noon Friday.

At least 40 people were killed overnight after Helene came ashore late Thursday east of Tallahassee, Florida, and ripped through several states.

“Currently they have been assigned to report to Atlanta, but this can change,” Clark County Deputy Fire Chief Billy Samuels said in an email. “The anticipated travel time is approximately 30 hours. Typically, these missions are for 14 days, but can be shorter or longer depending upon the need of the communities and the incident.”

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The capabilities of the team consists of search, recovery, rescue, heavy rigging, water operations, rescue K-9s, intelligence gathering and whatever else the community needs, Samuels said.

Team members come from the Clark County Fire Department, Las Vegas Fire Department, North Las Vegas Fire Department, Boulder City Fire Department, and Henderson Fire Department, but the team also includes private civilians.

Contact Marvin Clemons at mclemons@reviewjournal.com. The Associated Press contributed to this report.



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Southern Nevada team heading to Atlanta for hurricane response

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Southern Nevada team heading to Atlanta for hurricane response


LAS VEGAS, Nev. (FOX5) – Friday, Nevada Task Force One was notified of possible deployment to assist in Hurricane Helene.

Program Manager Kenyon Leavitt received an alert notification around 3 a.m. Around 8 a.m., it was upgraded to a Type III activation. According to Clark County, that consists of 45 personnel.

Friday, Nevada Task Force One was notified of possible deployment to assist in Hurricane Helene.(Clark County)

NV-TF1 is one of 28 FEMA teams. It includes personnel from the Clark County Fire Department, Las Vegas Fire and Rescue, North Las Vegas Fire Department, Boulder City Fire Department, Henderson Fire Department, and private civilians.

The county says they are headed to Atlanta. It will take the team about 30 hours to travel and the mission could last for 14 days.

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The capabilities of this team consist of: Search, Recovery, Rescue, Heavy Rigging, Water Operations, Rescue K’9s, Intelligence Gathering, etc., and whatever else the community needs.

“We would like to thank all the supporting members on helping get this team out the door,” Clark County says. “We will periodically update Southern Nevada with how their efforts are going.”

Southern Nevada’s Red Cross team is also deploying two volunteers to Hurricane Helene.



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In August, Nevada sportsbooks generated $25 million in sports betting revenue, a YoY increase

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In August, Nevada sportsbooks generated  million in sports betting revenue, a YoY increase


On Thursday, the Nevada Gaming Commission reported $25 million in sports betting revenue. That was a notable year-over-year increase for operators in the state. Compared to their numbers from August 2023, the revenue was up 38.2%. That comfortably outpaced a 5.8% rise in the handle to $455.8 million. 

Revenue was down 3% from their figures in July despite a 21.3% upswing in their betting handle. In August, the $4.86 billion handle was down 3.9% compared to their figures in the first eight months of 2023. However, the $289.9 million is up 15.5%. Their 6.4% hold in 2024 is over one percentage point higher. Nevada’s year-to-date totals for state taxes are $19.6 million, roughly $2.6 million ahead of their pace last year.

Where did Nevada sportsbooks see the most wagers in August?

August has Week 0 of college football, NFL pre-season, MLB, and other various sporting events to bet on. While it’s not as busy as the fall, Nevada still saw increased revenue last month. Operators collected more than $8.7 million in revenue in August from football. That was a 72.9% increase from their figures in 2023. Additionally, Nevada’s $84.6 million handle was up 62.2% last year. That also beat their previous record of $72.3 million in August 2019. 

The “catch-all” category took a jump in revenue for August 2024. This includes golf, tennis, soccer, boxing, MMA, and auto racing. Nevada sportsbooks collected $7.6 million in revenue, a 64% YoY increase. Their betting handle from the “catch-all” category in August was $112.3 million. 

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This helped Nevada sportsbooks offset a negative shift in baseball wagering last month. Their revenue for baseball in August was 1.8% higher at $9.7 million. However, the betting action from April – August has decreased compared to 2023. Nevada’s $1.14 billion handle in that fourth-month span is down 15.4% YoY. Their $$61.5 million in revenue is also 10% lower.

How did mobile sportsbooks fare in Nevada?

Despite $14.8 million in revenue from mobile sportsbooks in August, Nevada’s 4.7% hold on $313 million worth of wagers is their lowest in 2024. Digital wagering accounted for 61.4% of the total revenue. That is on pace to be the highest percentage since the NCGB first published those figures in 2020. Retail sportsbooks had a 7.1% win rate in August, enough for $10.2 million in wagers from $142.8 million in wagers.



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