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.
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State lawmakers are expected to heavily amend a water conservation bill that irked septic tank owners in the Las Vegas Valley.
During a roundtable with Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto, recipients of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals shared their concerns following a court ruling that puts “Dreamers” in limbo.
Complex transactions without transfer taxes frequently cite an exemption allowed under state law for entities that transfer property to a subsidiary.
Students used scientific research to discover how someone with PTSD would respond to different elements inside “Mojave Bloom,” a 628-square-foot home powered by the sun.
Nevada recorded more than 5,000 excess deaths after COVID-19 struck, according to a 50-state national study.
Appointments are still required for the majority of transactions, and motorists can book the new appointment times by the end of the week.
Heather Korbulik says the goals are to process people en masse at the unemployment office, get the call center phased in and help people get through on those lines.
Nevada Gov. Brian Sandoval on Saturday married Las Vegas gaming executive Lauralyn McCarthy in Lake Tahoe.
Less than half of students in Nevada and Clark County in grades three through eight are proficient in English and about one-third are proficient in math, according to new data from the state Department of Education.
Sen. Dean Heller’s expected speech on statewide infrastructure projects was drowned out by four hecklers who were escorted out by security during a Friday luncheon hosted by the Las Vegas Latin Chamber of Commerce.
The proposal by Sen. Tick Segerblom would also fund the expansion of Reno’s Nevada Museum of Art.
When it comes to the debate over a $1.9 billion domed football stadium, rural and Northern Nevada tourism leaders aren’t much different from their counterparts in Southern Nevada.
Nevada lawmakers will return to work Thursday as the debate and fate of a bill to help finance a domed stadium and expand the Las Vegas Convention Center moves to the Assembly, where its path to passage could be bumpy.
Clark County will get another group of elected officials, but they’ll continue to do just what they do now: serving as volunteers on rural town advisory boards.