National Reach. Locally Served. ITAR Compliant
City of Sloan Law Enforcement Support Services
We have been a reliable history of supporting Sloan law enforcement with hazardous waste collection, controlled material destruction and evidence storage. We provide DEA and other agencies with experienced and cleared emergency responders year round in Sloan and around Clark County.
Leading Sloan Emergency Response and Law Enforcement Support Services Provider
Deploying Sloan crime scene cleaning operations, car accident cleanup, meth lab cleanup and drug neutralization to law enforcement agencies for decades. Trained in sensitive site support such as schools, homicide scenes, shipping containers and illicit drug production laboratories.
Our emergency response professionals are experienced working around flammables, explosive gases, poisons, toxins, acids and bases and have all the identification instruments necessary to identify and evaluate hazards in the field.
Our } laboratory packing procedures allow for rapid sorting and identification and segregation of waste materials, elevating the process of cleanup and material segregation and cataloging.
Clark County Law Enforcement Hazardous Service Experience
- Fentanyl, methamphetamine and PCP Labs
- Illegal cannabis grow labs
- Illegal cannabis processing operations
- Highway incidents
- Tank and pipeline spills and overflows
- Leaking drums
- Mercury spills
- Biological and infectious materials
- Ship groundings
- Airplane crash sites
- Train derailments and accidents
- Hydrocarbon, chemical and hazardous
- Material spills
- Confined Space Entry and Rescue
- Natural disasters
- Emergency chemical lab packs
- DEA, Homeland Security, and Customs and Border Protection incidents
- Illegal shipment cleaning and waste
- incineration.
- Fires and spills in warehouses and distribution centers
- Abandoned waste cleanup
- Drug Disposal
- Decontamination of chemical spills
- Homeless encampment cleanup
- Bilge Water Disposal
- Biohazard Disinfection
- Bulk Sanitizer Disposal
- Chemical Disposal
- Clean Harbors
- Emergency Spill Response
- Firefighting Foam Disposal
- Hazardous Waste Management
- Homeless Encampment Clean-out
- Law Enforcement Support Services
- Oily Water Disposal
- Scrap Metal Recycling
- Vacuum Truck Services
- Waste-to-energy (WtE)
Sloan is an unincorporated community with a population of 105 (as of the U.S. Census 2010) in Clark County, Nevada, situated 18 miles southwest of Las Vegas. It is named for its limestone dolomite carnotite and was first settled in 1912 under the name Ehret; named for the founders’ family name, but changed its name to Sloan on September 11, 1922. It is known for its canyon and its Sloan Canyon Petroglyph Site, Petroglyph Canyon, Black Mountain and is mostly located within the North McCullough Wilderness Area and is adjacent to the McCullough Range. It contains well-preserved petroglyphs and several hiking trails that allow visitors to photograph the petroglyphs. Sloan is also home to the George W. Dunaway Army Reserve Center which officially opened in April 2015, which is a large military area not open to the public. 2.7 miles west of Sloan was the site of the Bonanza Air Lines Flight 114 accident, which killed 29 people. Most of the residential areas are located on the main street, Sloan Road, and other smaller roads such as Arville Street, Hinston Street, and Roark Avenue. It is adjacent to Interstate 15 and is accessible from exit 25. The Sloan Canyon visitors center and trailhead to the Petroglyphs are accessible from a newer paved road through the Henderson neighborhood of Anthem, east of Interstate 15.
The Sloan Canyon Petroglyph Site is a National Register-listed property located within the Sloan Canyon National Conservation Area, which is a 48,438 acre conservation area in the eastern part of Sloan. It contains more than 1,700 individual design elements that dates back to Archaic times. It also contains geological features such as volcanic rock peaks. Its petroglyphs dates thousands of years back and includes carvings and paintings by Indian peoples such as the Ancestral Puebloans, Patayan people, and Southern Paiute people. It was designed a National Conservation Area by the U.S. Congress in 2002, through the passing of the H.R. 5200 – Clark County Conservation of Public Land and Natural Resources Act of 2002.
Sloan Wikipedia Page