dominque de biasio, hal smith elementary when i came in, i knew we were a high need region. We are the 5th Largest School district in the nation. We have to fill those classrooms. tony smith, 8 news now right now, there are hundreds of thousand of students, but not enough educators in the classrooms. dominque de biasio, hal smith elementary everybody i talk too, i am like, hey you need a job . We have plenty of them. tony smith, 8 news now in 2015, the clark county School District lost about 16 hundred teachers. dominque de biasio, hal smith elementary we really need good teachers. And we need people, who are going to stay. tony smith, 8 news now recently, the Governors Office gave School Districts the ablitity to offer provisional teaching licenses. michael gentry, interim Human Resources chief for ccsd so, we are starting to see the tracking and i think a certain percentage, maybe the bulk of is thanks to the provisional licensing. michael gentry, interim Human Resources chief for cc
It s the latest flashpoint in a decades-long battle to find a home for the nation s nuclear waste and it s being waged by unlikely allies and competing interests in the hamlets north of New York City in the shadow of Indian Point s nuclear reactors and in the oil and gas fields of New Mexico.
In New Mexico, anti-nuclear groups and environmentalists have joined with the oil and gas industry in the Permian Basin to prevent Holtec from building an interim site midway between Carlsbad and Hobbs to store the nation s waste.
And in New York, local officials eager to find new uses for the Indian Point site have squared off against environmental groups who think it might be safest to keep the spent fuel there.