Golden State “price-gouging” law could raise gasoline prices further.
Editorials
“We understand clearly that he is in prison to get exchanged,” Yevegny Smirnov, a Russian attorney, told The New York Times.
Even some Palestinians in Gaza knew exactly whom to blame — and it wasn’t Israel.
Desperate to keep third parties off the ballot in Nevada and elsewhere.
Nevada education does have some bright spots. Many are provided by local charter schools.
Government shouldn’t be able to seize and keep your property without proving that you’ve committed a crime.
If you want to see how the education establishment kills education reform efforts, look at what it has done over the past eight years to gut teacher evaluations.
Steve Sisolak once used detailed payroll data to show that firefighters were gaming the overtime system. As governor, he’s likely to decide the fate of a bill that would hide similar information.
Creating something successful and replicating that success at scale are two different things. The good news for students is that a new study shows some charter schools can do both.
It makes sense that Nevada’s existing medical care providers want to handicap new competitors. That doesn’t mean elected officials should be doing their bidding.
Only the government could turn a business monopoly into an enterprise losing billions a year. It sounds impossible, but that’s what the U.S. Postal Service has done.
A dispute between adults shouldn’t take away from the amount of time students spend in the classroom.
Forget Washington, D.C. If you’re looking for an impending constitutional crisis, head to Carson City.
The priority for some environmentalists isn’t saving species, but limiting human development. That’s the takeaway from the Center for Biological Diversity’s newest plan, which would put a damper on Las Vegas’ humming economy.