Children must now be 5 years old by Aug. 1 to attend kindergarten in Nevada’s public schools.
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Las Vegas saw a 37 percent increase in out-of-state patients at Planned Parenthood health centers since the Supreme Court issued its Dobbs decision.
The White House announced on Monday its allocations of $42.5 billion to all 50 states and U.S. territories as part of the “Internet for All” initiative.
Gov. Joe Lombardo and lawmakers in the Democratic-controlled Legislature passed hundreds of bills this year, though Lombardo set a record for the number of vetoes in one session.
Gov. Joe Lombardo vetoed bills last week that aimed to protect renters from evictions and revise leasing agreements.
Retired U.S. Army Col. Mark Robertson ran against Rep. Dina Titus in Nevada’s 1st Congressional District but lost by 5.6 percentage points in 2022.
The law increases the sentences for reckless driving resulting in substantial bodily harm or death while going more than 50 mph over the speed limit.
Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto plans to introduce legislation to build the pipeline through the national conservation area.
The bill allocates $64.5 million for a new school, to replace a decades-old building that sits adjacent to a hydrocarbon plume.
Nevada has reached a $193 million settlement with Teva Pharmaceuticals in an opioid-related lawsuit, the attorney general’s office announced.
The Legislature has adjourned until Monday, after the Senate on Thursday failed to take action on the Oakland A’s stadium proposal that is the subject of the current special session.
Nevada is the first state in the nation to give a local water agency the power to limit individual home water use.
State senators peppered supporters of the Oakland A’s stadium project with questions during a hearing in a special session. A vote could come Thursday.
An error by SNWA, combined with pushback to a “nonfunctional turf” ban could leave the Las Vegas Valley short of the water savings it needs to continue growing without increasing its overall water use.
Assembly Bill 524, a bill that directs utilities to build more in-state power generation, passed with overwhelming support on the last day of the legislative session.