MGM Resorts International has sold the Village, which includes most of the site of the 2017 Route 91 Harvest Festival, to the Three Affiliated Tribes of North Dakota, the company announced Friday.
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Weary travelers endured another day of widespread flight cancellations Wednesday as Southwest Airlines tried to “reset” its operations.
Some of Nevada’s hourly workers will be taking home a larger check after a ballot measure to raise the state’s minimum wage to $12 an hour is poised to pass.
While shoppers prepare for Halloween by buying candy and quirky costumes, companies like Goodwill of Southern Nevada are looking to bolster their holiday workforce.
A California-based company is transforming the Safari Motel into transitional housing for adults who’ve recently become homeless.
Most heat complaints to Nevada OSHA were about a lack of air conditioning, causing temperatures to soar and workers feeling nauseous, fatigued and dizzy.
The Greater Las Vegas Short Term Rental Association filed a lawsuit earlier this month against the state and Clark County on being allowed to rent their properties.
Authorities have determined the cause of a fire that sent flames and smoke billowing into the air outside Allegiant Stadium Saturday after a concert by The Weeknd.
Las Vegas Mayor Carolyn Goodman cast the lone “no” vote, saying the property needs a park.
A request by the Sapphire Gentlemen’s Club to operate 12 bar-top poker machines has been delayed by the Clark County Commission.
The City Council is scheduled Wednesday to consider talks for a possible mixed-use medical campus at the 50-acre property.
The would-be developer of housing planned for the defunct Badlands golf course is ready to settle its longstanding legal dispute with the city of Las Vegas for $64 million, according to documents prepared for Wednesday’s City Council meeting.
There was a noticeable rise in midweek hotel occupancy in June, thanks to convention attendance, but levels still haven’t reached where it was before COVID-19 struck.
A U.S. House panel spent the past year examining corporate landlords for eviction abuse, but reported the Las Vegas-based company’s practices were “uniquely egregious.”
Las Vegas-based Halo.Car service, which is temporarily free, is still in its testing phase and only available in the downtown Las Vegas area.