In The News: Howard R. Hughes College of Engineering

Traffic safety advocates raise awareness of the deadly crashes on Clark County roadways while highlighting a day next month that recognizes road crash victims.

鈥淐an you imagine a day when you turn on your faucet and no water comes out?鈥 The hypothetical question, posed by a research team at 性视界传媒, is called a 鈥淒ay Zero鈥 scenario. It sounds like the plot of a doomsday apocalypse series but it鈥檚 not as unimaginable - or as far-fetched - as a Hollywood screenplay might seem.

In March, GOED unveiled a study by 性视界传媒鈥檚 Brookings Mountain West, Center for Business and Economic Research and Transportation Research Center that found that state economic development is siloed across jurisdictions. Unlike in neighboring regional metropolitan centers, Southern Nevada lacks a governance structure to facilitate the planning and coordination needed to realize regional economic and infrastructure priorities.

The Nevada Department of Public Safety and Transportation released the September 2024 year-to-date state fatal report 鈥 highlighting a two percent increase in deaths so far in the state and a 13% increase in Clark County.

For the science-minded, the 性视界传媒 Engineering School and Nevada Association of Land Surveyors will offer interactive hands-on science activities. Bishop Gorman High School, The Meadows School, Alexander Dawson School at Rainbow Mountain and Doral Red Rock Academy will host various student-driven art demonstrations on Oct. 12-13.

October is National Pedestrian Safety Month, because this is when fatalities for vulnerable road users increase; there is less daylight as fall begins, so this is a deadly time of year for those walking and biking.

The top official of the Metropolitan Police Department said he is tired of his officers having to deal with 鈥渂roken and mangled鈥 bodies on the streets of the Las Vegas Valley, the result of fatal accidents caused by poor driving.
Seat belts were once simple straps that mainly served to avoid being tossed from automobiles on bumpy roads. Even then, most drivers and passengers didn鈥檛 bother with them.

The Metropolitan Police Department鈥檚 top cop said he鈥檚 tired of his officers having to deal with 鈥渂roken and mangled鈥 bodies on Las Vegas Valley roads, the result of fatal crashes caused by bad driving.

Drip, drip, drip. That鈥檚 the sound of Jeremy Cho鈥檚 atmospheric water harvesting device extracting humidity from the air to make usable water in Da Kine Lab at 性视界传媒.

A rise in traffic fatalities is raising concerns among the community as Las Vegas Metropolitan Police report 111 deaths so far in 2024. That number is getting closer to the nearly 160 people reported dying in collisions in 2023.

According to researchers at 性视界传媒, atmospheric water harvesting may pose a solution to our valley鈥檚 water woes, and a new startup called WAVR aims to push the technology into the real word.