The Clark County School District is looking to make it easier to hire retired employees to fill “critical” vacant teaching, other jobs.
Local Las Vegas
Las Vegas breaking news from Nevada's most reliable source. Read about the latest updates happening in Las Vegas at reviewjournal.com.
The Clark County School Board approved a tentative $3.4 billion budget for the 2024-25 school year. The tentative budget now will be filed with the State of Nevada for review.
Contrary to social media rumors the Las Vegas Monorail remains on track to transport riders in the resort corridor well into the near future, according to tourism agency that owns it.
More people are dying on Las Vegas Valley roads, even though officers have increased traffic citations by over 200 percent, Sheriff Kevin McMahill says.
More road disruption is coming near the Las Vegas Strip as a leaking water main under the site of a bridge built for the F1 Las Vegas Grand Prix will be replaced.
Jeff German, a longtime reporter who was stabbed to death in 2022, was the first posthumous recipient of the Frank McCulloch Award for Courage in Journalism.
Superintendent Jesus Jara, who has been at the helm of the nation’s fifth-largest school district since 2018, has had a tumultuous tenure.
The Clark County School District has agreed to turn over public records related to Superintendent Jesus Jara’s social media accounts by Feb. 5 in response to a lawsuit by the teachers union.
Under the new law, any person who stops in “pedestrian flow zones,” which include the pedestrian bridges and up to 20 feet surrounding the connected stairs or escalators could be charged with a misdemeanor.
The more than 40,000-member Las Vegas Ethiopian and Eritreans community on Tuesday celebrated a historic milestone — the inauguration of Clark County’s first official cultural district.
A new Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department Foundation initiative is designed to support events that will connect the Hispanic community with police.
Two weeks ago, a storm ravaged the popular winter recreation area, bringing eight inches of rain and three feet of flood waters. Now the cleanup process is underway.
Prohibitions on spitting or sweeping and a ban on hula hoops, among other items, at Fremont Street Experience are just a few of odd the local ordinances on the books in Las Vegas.
A parade, a festival and a ribbon-cutting ceremony will inaugurate Clark County’s first official cultural district.
Clark County has launched the “You Light It, We Write It” campaign to urge caution in both the purchasing and use of fireworks.