Southern Nevada Health District bureaucrats must be bored silly, because they’re now spending their time making it harder for people to swim.
Editorials
The convictions will make an already vicious and contentious election even more so, further riling activists and creating deeper fissures.
One of the most persistent myths in politics is that rich have lower tax rates than middle-income workers. New data shows how false that is.
Who will get serious about Washington’s spending problem?
A judge paddled the Clark County School Board on the backside over the panel’s petulant response to meddling from Carson City. Will elected trustees take the lesson to heart?
Teachers shouldn’t have to worry about whether their insurance provider is capable of paying their bills.
Subsidizing failure doesn’t work. That’s the premise of president-elect Joe Biden’s new plan for community colleges, however.
To understand how much trouble public pensions are in, just look at CalPERS.
Before the end of the decade, the Social Security Trust Fund could be out of money.
A new program in the Clark County judicial system is allowing low-risk offenders to get in and out of jail faster.
Contrary to the popular narrative, most millennials aren’t drowning in student loans. That’s because most millennials don’t even have college debt.
Long lines aren’t the only reason to be upset with the Nevada Department of Motor Vehicles.
Legislative Democrats scurried out of bed Wednesday morning hoping to find, with apologies to Theodore Geisel, “their presents, their ribbons, their wrappings — their snoof and their fuzzles, their tinglers and trappings!” Instead, they found the Grinch.
Children can be an effective political prop. They shouldn’t be used as an excuse to avoid making policy arguments.