Nevada
Nevada First-Gen Network Micro-Grants | University of Nevada, Reno
The Nevada First-Gen Community (NFGN) is happy to announce that beginning January 2023, can be disbursing $1.2 million {dollars} in micro-grants to applications and initiatives throughout the state of Nevada!
Micro-Grant Particulars
Micro-grants will present well timed and focused help to applications and initiatives which can be devoted to guiding first-generation college students towards greater schooling.
Any organizations, non-profits, or initiatives in Nevada that serve first-generation college students in center college, highschool, and in greater schooling are eligible to use!
Candidates should be capable to meet a number of of the next standards:
- Mentorship
- Tutoring
- Enhance entry to meals and know-how
- Assuaging studying loss
- Efforts for extra programming
- Serve college students between sixth grade to post-secondary schooling
Utility and Micro-Grant Timeline
The micro-grant software is open to your entire state of Nevada starting September 2022. The anticipated launch of the applying portal can be September 1, 2022, and can shut on November 10, 2022, at 6pm PST.
Overview of purposes will happen from November 12, 2022, by way of December 2022. Recipients can be notified by the tip of December and the micro-grant cycle is anticipated to start no later than January 20, 2023.
Utility Opens – September 1, 2022, at 12am PST
Utility Closes – November 10, 2022, at 6pm PST
Overview – November 10, 2022 – December 2022
Recipients Notified – Finish of December 2022
Grant Distribution – January 2023
“A big-scale funding in first-generation scholar programming is virtually unheard-of, this seems to be completely different than something we’re actually seeing proper now. I believe there’s a lack of know-how generally on the state authorities stage of who first-generation college students are and the challenges establishments have in supporting college students…Nevada may actually be a nationwide chief on this house.”
-Sarah Whitney, Inside Greater Training, Nov. 2020 https://www.insidehighered.com/information/2021/11/30/nevada-lawmakers-invest-first-generation-students
Nevada
Nevada fuel line will return to normal service
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (FOX5) – Clark County asks consumers to ”not panic buy at the pump.”
After messages from Clark County saying the fires in California were potentially affecting the fuel lines servicing Southern Nevada, the County is advising the public to not run out and buy gas for their cars.
The gas line from California to Nevada will re-start and be operational by Friday.
Message from Clark County:
“In working with California, a solution has been put in place which will power the Kinder Morgan fuel line into southern Nevada and fuel should start to flow into the valley in the next 12-24 hours. Clark County Office of Emergency Management remains engaged on this issue with regional and state partners. The public is encouraged to not panic buy at the pump.”
FOX5 will have a full report on the gas line running from California to Nevada at 10 and 11 p.m.
Copyright 2025 KVVU. All rights reserved.
Nevada
Missing Southfield girl might be in Nevada with man who just found out he’s her father, police say
SOUTHFIELD, Mich. – A 4-year-old Southfield girl who has been missing for two months might be in Nevada with a man who just found out he’s her father, police said.
Bali Packer was picked up by her biological father, Juwon Madison, on Nov. 10, 2024, and has not been returned to her mother, Timeah Wright-Smith.
Packer was last seen wearing a blue PJ mask shirt, pink hat, pink leggings, and pink boots.
Madison is not listed on Packer’s birth certificate, and no court order in place states he has any parenting time.
He recently discovered that he may have been the father of Packer prior to picking her up with her mother’s permission, who is the sole guardian of the 4-year-old girl.
Madison is believed to have left Michigan and went down to Nevada.
Wright-Smith does not believe Packer is in any danger.
Bali Packer | Details |
---|---|
Eyes | Brown |
Age | 4 |
Height | 3′3″ |
Hair | Brown |
Weight | 3 pounds |
Anyone with information should contact the Southfield Police Department at 248-796-550 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-Speak Up.
All tips to Crime Stoppers are anonymous. Click here to submit a tip online.
READ: More Missing in Michigan coverage
Copyright 2021 by WDIV ClickOnDetroit – All rights reserved.
Nevada
Southern Nevada’s desert tortoises getting help to cross the road
Long before Southern Nevada built its winding highways, desert tortoises roamed freely without consequence. For these federally protected animals, crossing the street without a dedicated path could mean a death sentence.
Along a 34-mile stretch of U.S. Highway 93 near Coyote Springs, fencing and underground tortoise crossings will allow for more safe passage.
“We see substantial road mortality and near-misses in this area,” said Kristi Holcomb, Southern Nevada biological supervisor at the Nevada Department of Transportation. “By adding the fencing, we’ll be able to stop the bleed.”
The federal Department of Transportation awarded Nevada’s transportation agency a $16.8 million grant to build 61 wildlife crossings and 68 miles of fencing along the highway. Clark and Lincoln counties, as well as private companies such as the Coyote Springs Investment group, will fund the project in total.
Under the Endangered Species Act, the federal government listed Mojave desert tortoises as threatened in 1990. The project area includes the last unfenced portion of what the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service considers to be the desert tortoise’s “critical habitat.”
In Clark County, some keep desert tortoises as pets, adoptions for which are only authorized through one Nevada nonprofit, the Tortoise Group. Environmentalists in the area have long worried that sprawling solar projects may have an adverse effect on tortoise populations. As many as 1,000 tortoises per square mile inhabited the Mojave Desert before urban development, according to the Center for Biological Diversity.
Crossings prevent inbreeding
One major reason that connecting critical habitat across a highway is paramount is to prevent inbreeding, Holcomb said.
“When you build a highway down the middle of a desert tortoise population, they become shy about crossing the highway,” Holcomb said. “By installing tortoise fences, we’ll give the tortoise population a chance to recover.”
Desert tortoises tend to walk parallel to the fences, which will lead them to the crossings they need to go to the other side. Promoting genetic diversity is one way different tortoise populations can be stabilized, Holcomb said.
The Nevada Department of Transportation doesn’t have a set timeline, and the project will need to go through an expedited federal review process to ensure full consideration of environmental effects.
“Be mindful, not only of tortoises that might be on the roadway, but also of our impacts on tortoises,” Holcomb added.
Contact Alan Halaly at ahalaly@reviewjournal.com. Follow @AlanHalaly on X.
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