Nevada
“That day I had a guardian angel”: Northern Nevada Trauma Intervention Program seeks volunteers
RENO, Nev. (KOLO) – April 25 of 2021 began as a traditional Sunday for the Millettes.
“Renee and I have been hanging an image we had simply transformed on the primary flooring of the home,” mentioned Eric Millette. “That’s after we heard, what we did. Ran downstairs and that’s after we noticed that Brandon had taken his personal life.”
Brandon was the youngest of three and solely 14 years outdated on the time of his dying.
“Our jokester all the time had a comic story to inform, all the time had a goofy dance, all the time cared for others,” mentioned Renee Millette, Brandon’s mom. “Something {that a} buddy wanted or was hurting, he was there.”
Regardless of their years as a firefighter and a nurse, that second was one thing they may have by no means ready for.
“When tragedy happens in individuals’s lives, that’s their 9/11, that’s the worst day of their lives,” mentioned Gabrielle Totton, govt director of Trauma Intervention Packages or TIP. “That’s as unhealthy because it’s ever going to be, and so they should have any individual current with them.”
For the Millettes that particular person was Totton.
Merely put, TIP is a gaggle of well-trained residents emotionally supporting fellow residents in a time of disaster.
“Reno Police Division arrives on scene… in the event that they’re not capable of save the particular person, they might name and say “Hey ship us a volunteer, now we have household on the scene who want some further help,” mentioned Totton.
“What that appears like is absolutely simply being there with individuals,” mentioned TIP volunteer Clarissa Roman. “Handing somebody their tissue, reminding them to take their treatment. Offering the help that we don’t know we’re going to wish till you’re in that second.”
Roman has been a volunteer at TIP for six years now. She says the individuals is what retains her going.
“I’ve left each single name considering to myself, ‘What an unbelievable honor it was to be with these people on the worst days of their lives’,” mentioned Roman.
TIP at present has 28 volunteers and is seeking to have 40. To change into one, candidates have to finish 36 hours of in-class coaching earlier than finishing three months of area coaching. You additionally want a clear driving report, prison background, a dependable car and entry to a pc.
Nevertheless, the largest requirement is coronary heart.
“That day I had a guardian angel, come to my home and love me and take care of my coronary heart. I didn’t have to consider something. I felt like I didn’t even stroll that day. I felt like somebody simply carried me round the entire home and that was Gabi and her TIP program,” mentioned Renee Millette.
The Millettes are grateful for the help proven by the group and are actually attempting to maneuver ahead, taking it sooner or later at a time.
TIP could have a spherical of coaching beginning Thursday at Regional Public Security Coaching Heart on Spectrum Boulevard. The coaching is at 6:00 p.m. and you’ll pre-register right here or go early.
For those who can’t make it tomorrow, name (775) 337-2112 to see when the subsequent coaching can be.
If you need to advocate for suicide prevention, examine Without end 14, which was fashioned by a grieving household and a gaggle of devoted group members to advance dialog and human connection to stop teen suicide.
For those who want help, name the Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 988 or take a look at CARE to 839863.
Copyright 2023 KOLO. All rights reserved.
Nevada
Wild horses and burros still the subject of awe, inhumane treatment
Driving over the cattle guards that mark the boundaries of the Las Vegas Valley, Southern Nevadans are likely to come across an equine friend or two. Or a herd of them.
Wild horses and burros, considered to be an emblem of the unconquerable American West, have been a permanent fixture of the Great Basin and the Mojave Desert for centuries. They roam Nevada’s sprawling public, federally owned lands, of which the state has the highest percentage in the nation.
Another superlative that belongs to the Silver State is the highest number of wild horses and burros. It’s home to about half of them, with more than 40,000 on federally managed land, according to the most recent estimates from both the Bureau of Land Management and the U.S. Forest Service.
Largely thought to be descended from horses that Europeans brought to the West in the 16th century, Nevada’s wild horses are the subject of dual fascination and concern. That’s mostly due to how federal agencies round them up with helicopters and the environmental damage such large numbers of them could cause if populations were left untouched.
Nevada’s ‘Wild Horse Annie’ spoke for the mustangs
As mandated by the Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act of 1971, both federal land management agencies are required by law to protect and defend these animals.
The law was brought to Congress all because of one Nevada woman: “Wild Horse Annie,” also known as Velma Johnston.
Wild horses were once the subject of abuse by so-called mustangers, who would sell off their meat commercially. After an encounter where she saw a trailer full of bleeding horses on their way to a slaughter plant in the 1950s, Johnston riled up sentiment across the West to do something about it.
Johnston expressed her dissatisfaction with the 1959 Wild Horse Annie Act, a preliminary law that outlawed the poisoning of water holes and hunting wild horses from planes. She said it lacked any real enforcement mechanism.
In response to requirements from federal law, the BLM and Forest Service created their respective wild horse and burro programs to control the number of horses and burros out in the wild in a way that was deemed more humane.
Modern roundups marred by controversy
Because of the roundup and sale of wild horses in Western states, animals sold in federal auctions can be found as far east as Florida.
The BLM divided its land into 83 herd management areas, across which the agency says there should only be 12,811 wild horses and burros. The agency estimated this year that 38,023 of them roam its land. The Forest Service’s program is smaller, with 17 so-called territories, mostly in central Nevada, where only about 2,500 wild horses and burros currently reside, according to the agency’s counts.
Without proper population control, many say these non-native animals disrupt fragile desert ecosystems and food chains.
That leads the BLM to round up mustangs, place them in holding facilities and sell them for $125 each. About 290,000 wild horses and burros have been placed into private care since 1971, the BLM estimates. Over the years, newspaper investigations and watchdog groups have found that at least some horses are sent to slaughterhouses because of the agency’s limited oversight past the adoption period.
Though some have criticized the conditions of holding pens, the agency maintains that they “provide ample space to horses, along with clean feed and water.”
It uses helicopters to circle and capture the horses — a method some advocacy groups have called inhumane. The BLM maintains that its technique leads to the least amount of injury and deaths possible.
Other groups, such as American Wild Horse Conservation, call for the use of porcine zona pellucida, or PZP vaccines, which are administered through darts and make female horses infertile. It piloted such a method within the Virginia Range near Reno in partnership with the Nevada Department of Agriculture.
Contact Alan Halaly at ahalaly@reviewjournal.com. Follow @AlanHalaly on X and @alanhalaly.bsky.social on Bluesky.
Nevada
Alcohol, marijuana found after fatal wrong-way crash on I-15 in Nevada
Accident investigators found several containers of alcohol and marijuana packages in and around a Ford F-150 that was being driven the wrong way on Interstate 15 last week, leading to a crash that killed an off-duty Metro police officer as well as the driver of the pickup.
A third motorist suffered substantial injuries and had to be flown from Moapa to University Medical Center in Las Vegas for treatment, according to a Nevada Highway Patrol news release issued Thursday.
The preliminary investigation conducted by the Highway Patrol’s Traffic Homicide Unit determined that a Ford F-150, driven by Fernando Jimenez Jimenez, 31, of Las Vegas, was southbound in the northbound lanes of I-15 when it collided head-on with a Toyota Corolla driven by Metropolitan Police Department officer Colton Pulsipher, 29, of Moapa.
Both drivers were pronounced dead on scene.
After the initial collision, a Freightliner tractor-trailer swerved to avoid the wreckage. A secondary crash involved a Honda CR-V striking the Ford after it overturned in the travel lanes. The driver of the Freightliner was unharmed and remained at the crash site to assist investigators. The driver of the Honda CR-V was flown to the University Medical Center with substantial injuries.
Toxicology results are pending at the Clark County coroner’s office, according to the Nevada Highway Patrol.
In the news release, the Nevada Highway Patrol urged all drivers to make responsible choices.
“Impaired driving remains a leading cause of preventable crashes and fatalities on our roadways,” the statement said. “Plan ahead and designate a sober driver, use a ride-share service, or arrange alternative transportation. Your choices can save lives, including your own. If you spot an impaired driver on our roadways, report it immediately.”
The Nevada Highway Patrol Southern Command has investigated 75 fatal crashes resulting in 84 fatalities in 2024.
Contact Marvin Clemons at mclemons@reviewjournal.com.
Nevada
Horse Roundups in Utah, Nevada Need Judicial Review, Group Says
An animal conservation group told a federal appeals court that the US Bureau of Land Management abused its discretion and wrongly interpreted federal law in its plans for future wild horse roundups in Utah and Nevada.
Friends of Animals appealed a district court’s ruling that allows BLM to amend its 10-year plans for horse management zones in Utah and Nevada, arguing the agency’s population control methods exceed the review directives in the Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act. The US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia should set aside the plans entirely, according to the appellant brief filed …
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