With revelers set to return to the Las Vegas Strip and downtown to ring in the New Year, locals and visitors alike can expect an influx of traffic and road closures as the area ushers in 2022.
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Before friends and family can gather and be merry they’ll have to deal with the Scrooge of the season: travel.
With the pandemic emphasizing how much Nevadans relied on in-person Department of Motor Vehicles visits, the agency is looking to the future with a major online shift.
A busy stretch of Charleston Boulevard is set to see a reduced speed limit as Las Vegas officials look at the future of the area.
Approval of the contractor and design for the Interstate 15/Tropicana interchange project has been delayed twice and if it is delayed again, vital funding could be in jeopardy.
Work could commence soon on updating signage at McCarran International Airport to reflect the name change to Harry Reid International Airport.
To expand their autonomous capabilities, Motional is tripling the size of their test track, along with doubling their operations center near McCarran International Airport.
While a revamp of the Interstate 15/Tropicana Avenue interchange is touted as a needed improvement to traffic flow, one local gaming giant disagrees.
The contractor that could carry out the Tropicana Avenue/Interstate 15 interchange project was selected last week, but not without some controversy.
As transportation officials mull the future of the important Interstate 11 build-out, one option is now off the table.
With the Las Vegas Monorail never used as much as anticipated over the years, there’s hope by tourism officials that the Boring Company’s Vegas Loop could be a game-changer on the transportation front along the Resort Corridor into the downtown area.
Tick Segerblom spearheaded the move to get a vote on the renaming of Las Vegas’ airport, which received a unanimous yes vote by the county commission earlier this year.
The next time you apply for a new Nevada driver’s license, the card will look different than it has for at least the past seven years.
The use of artificial intelligence to strategically position law enforcement vehicles on Las Vegas’ busiest highways appears to have had some initial success in reducing dangerous driving.
Review-Journal reader Alan Altman recently inquired about why Terminal 3 at McCarran International Airport remains closed to flight traffic.