City Las Vegas Wants People to Capture Downtown

The City of Las Vegas wants professional and amateur photographers alike to capture the city in a new photo contest.
The contest is being sponsored by the city, the Downtown Las Vegas Alliance, Symphony Park and the Las Vegas Review Journal. There will be three categories.

•Lifestyle: photographs that feature the way people live and work in downtown.
•Stars: pictures of the interesting people that populate the area.
•Icons: photographs of the buildings and landmarks that make up the city scape.
The contest will be judged by professional photographers. The winners will be announced in October during a lecture at the Historic Fifth Street School. The winning photographs will be on display at various bars, restaurants and businesses in the downtown area. Besides just the honor of being on display for all to see, the winners will receive a variety of prizes including complementary drinks and meals plus gift certificates for downtown businesses.

All photographs will need to be submitted digitally by August 15 and you must be 21 or older to participate. To submit go to Downtown Las Vegas Alliance Website. 

Catastrophic Fire Possible on Mount Charleston

The scars from last summer's Cathedral fire can still be seen at Mount Charleston. UNLV scientists believe each year brings higher chances for a catastrophic fire in that community.
UNLV graduate students measure the diameter of trees at a research plot. Overseeing them is ecologist Scott Abella.
Stumps show where two large trees grew 100 years ago. The woods are now filled with trees which may be too much of a good thing.
"Major increase in the density of the forest, so a lot more trees today than a hundred years ago, so a lot more fuel. When we do have a fire today, it can pretty much take everything out," said Dr. Scott Abella, UNLV ecologist.
Abella's team hikes to the starting point of last year's Cathedral fire. Only the underbrush should have burned, instead, tall, dead trees remain.
"Because we've been so good at actually stopping these fires, we've had this tremendous fuel buildup," he said.
UNLV's scientific data shows wildfire fuel once burned off every two years. Without that, Abella says it's time to cut down some of these smaller trees.
"It actually costs about several hundred dollars per acre. These trees are fairly small. They need to be cut. There's very little market for them. It's not like we can get lumber from these trees. Again, in the long run. That's much cheaper than continuing to fight these fires," he said.
Abella's students keep studying Mount Charleston's forests, hoping to pinpoint the right areas to create fire breaks trying to prevent future catastrophic blazes.
"I still see myself collecting as much data as I can, researching, trying to get the forest to mimic the past forests, what it used to be like, and trying to restore it," said Ken Chittick, UNLV graduate student.
"I want to protect the forest and really all wilderness for future generations," said Sylvia Tran, UNLV graduate student.
The Mount Charleston Lodge tells 8 News NOW this past weekend was their first big tourist weekend of the summer. Last July's Cathedral fire started with a campfire. That gives an additional urgency to fire safety on the mountain.

Police Investigate Woman's Murder in South Las Vegas

Las Vegas police are investigating a murder in the area of Windmill Rd. and Giles St., near Las Vegas Blvd. and Blue Diamond Rd.
Police say a woman and her boyfriend were walking on Giles St., when her ex-boyfriend confronted the two and stabbed the woman. The woman was transported to UMC with multiple stabbed wounds and later died. Police found and arrested the ex-boyfriend.