California could place more regulations on oil refineries, which could raise gas prices in Nevada as the state gets most of its gas from the Golden State.
Business
For Las Vegas business news covering casinos, energy, housing, entrepreneurs and more turn to Las Vegas Review-Journal.
A $20 million fine paid by Wynn Resorts Ltd. in 2019 connected to sexual harassment allegations holds the record for the highest fine ever paid in Nevada.
The house was constructed in 24 hours and is offered for free to families this summer.
A master-planned community with more than 3,000 homes is slated for 505 acres of former federal land in the northwest valley.
The mining company said it filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection because it was unable to secure funding and cannot “continue carrying on business.”
The Las Vegas Victims’ Fund will complete its payouts this month.
Several hundred Las Vegas shooting survivors have yet to receive money from the Las Vegas Victims’ Fund.
MGM Resorts released more than an hour of security footage of Oct. 1 gunman Stephen Paddock. In the Mandalay Bay videos released to the Las Vegas Review-Journal, gunman Stephen Paddock appears calm and collected as he begins executing the setup for the worst mass shooting in modern U.S. history.
The Vegas Strong Fund is still completing its needs assessment, fund chairwoman Jan Jones Blackhurst said.
The company that bartenders say hired them for the Route 91 Harvest music festival went out of business, resulting in an investigation surrounding its hiring practices and many bartenders claiming they didn’t receive proper pay.
Contributions from the Southern Nevada gaming, tourism and entertainment industry accounted for almost 40 percent of the $31.4 million collected by the Las Vegas Victims’ Fund, organizers of the fund said Friday.
The Las Vegas Victims’ Fund is slated to begin distributing payments to eligible victims Monday, according to the original plan, but fund officials have not yet said how much money has been collected.
Three Las Vegas shooting survivors on Sunday received the first disbursements from Route91Strong, a nonprofit that helps victims of the Oct. 1 shooting.
The Las Vegas Victims’ Fund will begin distributing payments to eligible victims next month — but fund officials have not yet said how much money has been collected.
Assistance is available to families of people killed in the shooting and those who were either hospitalized or required medical treatment as a result of injuries suffered in the mass shooting at the Route 91 Harvest Festival.
Las Vegas is largely defined by its ability to defy expectations, and recent forecasts predicting a decline in its appeal to younger travelers are no exception. Contrary to these gloomy predictions, which suggest that an aging core visitor base might render the city’s 150,000 hotel rooms less appealing to new generations, the reality is strikingly […]
Latest Zillow marker report shows where Las Vegas ranks with other major metros in terms of the residential market temperature.
Many Las Vegas Valley gyms had exceptions that allowed them to operate pools without lifeguards. The Southern Nevada Health District is ending those exceptions.
The shop also offers beer, Champagne, cigars, and wine and cocktail tastings led by certified sommeliers.
Re-creations of Central Perk and other sets, along with original props and costumes, will be on display at “The ‘Friends’ Experience.”