Rumors spread online Friday that the U.S. government will soon be issuing stimulus checks to taxpayers in certain income brackets.
Business
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An Air Force veteran at Nellis and Creech air force bases is expected to be named Clark County aviation director at a meeting next week.
A foreign online gaming company has acquired a Las Vegas-based website and ticket sales platform to connect better with the Southern Nevada market.
The property off the Las Vegas Strip is now accepting reservations for its Halloween and Day of the Dead suites.
Based on a 1936 story, the newly themed slot machines will bring progressive jackpots starting at $10,000 to slots at six Las Vegas casinos.
A Las Vegas funeral home whose license was revoked after years of disciplinary actions was improperly storing bodies that were “leaking blood and bodily fluid,” records show.
Nevada marijuana tax revenues top $31 million in first four months of fiscal year; more than 45 percent of projections for the full year already collected.
Richard Karpel will take over management of the association starting Tuesday and will relocate from Washington, D.C., to Nevada.
Two more companies have asked the Nevada Public Utilities Commission for permission to leave NV Energy, adding to a total list of 10 companies that have requested access to an alternative energy supplier in 2018.
The Knights aren’t as dominant on the ice this season, but there is still plenty of excitement for desert hockey.
The department reported that Nevada’s personal income growth jumped 6.2 percent compared to the previous quarter. Earnings alone grew 6.4 percent, adding more than $1 billion to Nevadans’ incomes.
UNLV will offera new unmanned aerial systems certification program in the upcoming spring semester, broadening the local workforce’s skillset as the demand for drone pilots increases across industries.
CES, the world’s largest consumer tech show, is coming into Las Vegas Jan. 8, and is expected to bring in more than 180,000 visitors. Attraction businesses across the valley are preparing to see swings in the number of visitors.
When Dorian Levy decided to launch JottShots, he knew Las Vegas’ party-city reputation and high tourist volume made it the perfect market for the pre-packaged, ready-to-drink jello shots.
Take a glance around Chris Walach’s office, and you’ll pick up hints of his past.
It may be 50 degrees outside with no snow in sight, but the inside of the Postal Service facility in south Las Vegas could pass for a workshop in the North Pole.
There’s a weird, exhausting pressure in our culture to constantly be “growing.” It’s become an unwritten commandment: your career, your portfolio, even your mindfulness practice, everything must relentlessly climb upward. Downtime, traditionally a refuge, now feels like another chore penciled into an app, tracking your sleep like a stock price that better not dip.
“Reclaiming the Badlands — Redefining Luxury,” declares signage at the long-shuttered Las Vegas property.
The lab must be located within one of Las Vegas’ designated redevelopment zones, preferably in or near the Las Vegas Medical District.
The development, in the southwest valley, is slated to cost more than $130 million.
Development has slowed amid a series of market and economic headwinds.