Nevada
Nevada’s Mid-States Material Handling and Fabrication plans 13,000-foot expansion with USDA loan
Several state organizations have collaborated to provide a significant loan for a rural Story County company.
USDA Rural Development recently awarded Colo Telephone Company a $2 million pass-thru loan to help fund a 13,000-square-foot expansion at Mid-States Material Handling and Fabrication in Nevada.
The Iowa Area Development Group wrote the application with help from the Ames Chamber of Commerce.
The loan was received on behalf of the USDA’s Rural Economic Development Loan program, allowing Mid-States to access a 0% loan. Though Mid-States is about nine miles from Ames, Mid-States Senior Vice President Randy Vier said it is still considered a rural development.
“(Mid-States) has customers nationwide,” Vier said. “The loan gives us that much more capabilities of serving our clientele, not just in Story County but across the state and the entire nation.”
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What services does Mid-States provide?
Mid-States Companies has been based in Nevada since its first company opened in 2001. In addition to material handling and fabrication, Mid-States companies include Mid-States Millwrights and Builders, as well as Mid-States Crane and Trucking.
Mid-States offers millwright, design, crane and trucking services. Its fabrication company distributes structural steel products and material handling equipment.
Mid-States will add 13,000 square feet onto their existing 1280 S. B Avenue facility. They also have money appropriated for new manufacturing equipment. The expansion will allow the Story County company to hire nine additional employees in the next two years, folding them into their workforce of 85.
Vier said Mid-States started the expansion last fall and hopes to finish it by December 2024.
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A helping hand for local business
The $2 million loan is the maximum any one company can receive from the USDA, according to Vice President of Community Initiatives at IADG Ethan Pitt, who wrote the application on behalf of Colo Telephone and Mid-States.
The USDA doesn’t often distribute such significant loans.
“The program maximum fluctuates. It happens to be $2 million now, but a lot of those loans are less than that,” Pitt said. “Getting a $2 million loan is pretty substantial. “
For companies like Mid-States to qualify, a rural utility must step up and allow the loan to “pass through” their company. So, the $2 million loan will pass from the USDA to Colo Telephone to Mid-States.
“That money is only available if you have a rural utility provider like Colo Telephone who is willing to basically raise their hand and say, ‘We will be their conduit; we will be the pass-thru entity for the REDL,” Pitt said. “Without that local partner, the USDA can’t deploy the funds.”
John Ferrell, the Director of Business Programs at USDA Rural Development, enjoys administering their loan program because he works with diverse projects across the state. He believes that what sets the program apart is that it involves a collaborative effort rather than just a one-on-one relationship with the borrower.
“We work through our partners − our rural electric co-operatives and our telephone associations, they are the actual applicant on behalf of the borrower,” Ferrell said. “Collaboratively, they all work together with the borrower to identify the project and figure out what their needs are, and then they all come together to put together a design plan and they submit an application to us.”
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Organizations team up to boost projects
IADG, who helped write the loan application, is an economic development partner for rural utility providers across the state. The nonprofit has about 112 independent broadband utility providers as well as more than 20 rural electric co-operatives and rural municipal electrics it works with.
“Our organization helps them with any economic development project they’re interested in assisting with,” Pitt said. “Sometimes that’s helping with community projects, helping with business park or industrial sites, helping local businesses expand or recruiting local businesses. Anything under the umbrella of economic development that our utility partners are interested in, we’re there to help.”
Colo Telephone provides a fiber network for residents in rural Nevada, and Mid-States is a mainstay in the community, boasting more than 20 years of business.
“Mid-States is a customer, and we would like to support anything that is local when we see their growth in the community is going to be a benefit for everybody,” Shane Bellon, general manager at Colo Telephone, said. “With the help of the USDA and IADG, we were able to help them get the loan.”
Colo Telephone will be responsible for the loan until it’s paid off by Mid-States.
“It’s to their credit,” Pitt said. “There’s some sacrifice there.”
Pitt was complimentary of everyone involved and how the “web partners” came together.
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USDA loan program stands out nationally
Mid-States’ $2 million loan was closed in September of 2023 after a six-month application process, just one piece of the USDA’s record-breaking year.
The USDA in Iowa typically funds 20-25 projects yearly. However, in 2023, they supported a record 39 projects and awarded more than double the usual funding, Ferrell said. The federal department funded daycares, hospitals, schools and manufacturers.
Ferrell said Iowa taps into the program at a much higher rate than others do.
“It is due to our rural electric co-operatives and telephone associations in Iowa really taking an interest in their rural communities and trying to be proactive and initiate projects,” Ferrell said. “That has been what has made this program truly successful in Iowa.”
Celia Brocker is a government, crime, political and education reporter for the Ames Tribune. She can be reached at CBrocker@gannett.com.
Nevada
Caltech readies to build world’s most sensitive radio telescope in Nevada
LAS VEGAS (FOX5) — Caltech researchers are preparing to build a radio telescope that will be the most sensitive ever constructed and survey the sky 100 times faster than any other radio telescope worldwide.
Schmidt Sciences has greenlit construction of the Deep Synoptic Array after the project completed its final design review. The milestone paves the way for construction to begin on the telescope, which is planned for a remote valley in Nevada.
MORE ON FOX5: Conservation groups oppose potential sale of federal lands highlighted in land mapping tool
The array will consist of 1,650 radio dishes, each slightly more than 6 meters in diameter. The array will span an area of about 20 by 16 kilometers. The team plans to build the telescope by 2029, with science operations commencing soon after.
Survey capabilities
“The DSA will survey the entire visible sky several times in its first five years at unprecedented speeds,” said Gregg Hallinan, principal investigator of DSA, professor of astronomy at Caltech, and director of Caltech’s Owens Valley Radio Observatory. “While all other radio telescopes combined have so far found about 20 million radio sources, the DSA will match that in the first day of operations. By the end of its initial survey, it will have discovered about 1 billion new radio sources.”
The telescope will discover radio emission from millions of stars, galaxies, and other cosmic objects. It will address the mysteries of black holes, pulsars and fast radio bursts. It will also probe the physics of dark matter and gravity, and it will measure the structure and expansion of the universe.
“Radio astronomy is about to go from sketch to photograph,” said Vikram Ravi, the co-principal investigator of the DSA and a professor of astronomy at Caltech. “The DSA is looking at a far larger volume of the universe far more often than any other telescope.”
Real-time imaging
The DSA will be capable of making images in real time. The numerous radio dishes will feed into a supercomputer that creates images instantly. The images will be immediately accessible to the worldwide astronomical community.
“Without the radio camera, we would have to store 100 exabytes of data to complete our survey,” Hallinan said. “This would require 5 million hard drives in a multi-billion-dollar facility the size of multiple football fields. The radio camera solves this problem.”
The DSA’s radio camera will convert the raw data to images in real time with the help of an off-site supercomputer built from Graphics Processing Units built by Nvidia. The radio camera images will be given freely to the public with no proprietary period.
“We want the whole world to also have access to the data just as quickly as we do,” said Katie Jameson, the DSA lead project manager.
The DSA will have the ability to detect more than 100,000 intensely powerful flashes of radio light from fast radio bursts and to localize them to their home galaxies. The DSA will also reveal more than 20,000 new pulsars.
“The science that can be done is endless,” Hallinan said. “There will be enough discoveries to occupy every radio astronomer on the planet.”
The DSA is led by Caltech and funded by Schmidt Sciences. It is part of the Eric and Wendy Schmidt Observatory System. Two pathfinder projects that led to the DSA, the DSA-110 and the OVRO Long Wavelength Array, were funded by the National Science Foundation.
Copyright 2026 KVVU. All rights reserved.
Nevada
Conservation groups oppose potential sale of federal lands highlighted in land mapping tool
LAS VEGAS (FOX5) — Conservation groups are pushing back against a new state mapping tool that identifies federal lands potentially available for development in Nevada.
The governor’s office, in partnership with the Bureau of Land Management Nevada, unveiled the interactive map this week to make it easier to find federal land that may be available for development throughout the state and in the Las Vegas Valley.
“It is shocking to look at the map and see how many lands could potentially be sold off,” said Olivia Tanager, executive director of the Sierra Club Toiyabe Chapter.
Tanager said she was surprised at how many federal lands were identified for disposal when she first looked at the map.
“Places like Red Rock and Sloan Canyon in Southern Nevada are what draw people to live in Southern Nevada. We cannot continue to develop right up onto the boundaries or perhaps even in these precious places,” Tanager said.
The conservation group says the mapping tool is the latest effort to treat Nevada’s public lands as a real estate inventory rather than a shared public resource.
“We know that a lot of these areas are environmentally sensitive. We know that there are endangered species on these lands,” Tanager said.
MORE ON FOX5: Nevada unveils interactive tool mapping federal lands available for possible development, other uses
Housing concerns
Lawmakers have proposed using federal lands to create more affordable housing. Several areas at the edges of the Vegas Valley have been identified for potential development on the mapping tool. Tanager said she does not see that as a viable solution.
“The areas on the outskirts or far outside of existing urban areas are wholly inappropriate for affordable housing. Housing that is located that far away from services will never be truly affordable,” Tanager said. “As folks have to live further and further away from resources like schools and grocery stores, transportation costs go up substantially.”
The conservation group says the valley should fill in open lots and build upward within the existing urban core instead of building outward.
“We know that sprawl and developing on the outskirts of the valley worsens air quality as well from increased transportation,” Tanager said. “We know that sprawl is incredibly water-intensive. The further out you build, the harder it is to recapture that water.”
The Sierra Club Toiyabe Chapter says treating federal lands as disposable assets could set a dangerous precedent that accelerates privatization efforts and undermines the principle that public lands should remain in public hands for future generations.
Approximately 85% of Nevada’s total land area is owned by the federal government.
The state says the tool is designed to bolster information sharing about federal lands. The mapping tool is available here.
Copyright 2026 KVVU. All rights reserved.
Nevada
WOW Carwash touts year-round water conservation with recycling tech in Southern Nevada
LAS VEGAS (KSNV) — In the desert climate of Southern Nevada, WOW Carwash says it is working year-round to conserve water and reduce its environmental impact, using a combination of water-reclamation technology, biodegradable soaps and energy-efficient equipment.
The Las Vegas-born company says washing a car at home uses roughly 100 gallons of water. By comparison, WOW says it uses about 30 gallons per vehicle and reclaims up to 80% of the water.
WOW says its water-reclamation system exceeds typical local requirements. While local car washes are only required to have one sand and oil separator, WOW says it has four, along with a mud tank and UV filters designed to recycle water, reduce daily water use and ensure no solids are sent to the sewer system.
The company says all water from a WOW Carwash enters a 1,500-gallon mud tank underground at each location to begin separating soils from the water. From there, WOW says the water passes through a series of four sand and oil separators, where oils float to the surface, and soils sink to the bottom. WOW says the cleaned water is then pumped through UV and micron filters to remove remaining contaminants so it can be recycled and reused in the car wash.
WOW also says it repurposes the dirt washed off vehicles. The company says its water-reclamation tanks are pumped regularly by licensed vacuum trucks to maintain efficiency, and what is pumped out is then utilized as fertilizer.
WOW says all cleaning agents used in its tunnel wash process are environmentally safe and biodegradable, and that the soaps are safe to the human touch and for a vehicle’s paint while still being tough on dirt. The company says the cleaning agents break down naturally, reducing harmful runoff that could otherwise flow into storm drains and local waterways.
To reduce its carbon footprint, WOW says it uses energy-efficient equipment, including Variable Frequency Drives that allow electric motors to “ramp down” when demand is low to reduce electricity use during operations.
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