Former President Donald Trump will speak in Sunset Park at noon Sunday in temperatures that could reach 104 degrees.
Nevada
Henderson and North Las Vegas soon will be able to sponsor and oversee charter schools, after the Nevada Department of Education gave its blessing this week.
A political action committee says Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is ineligible to appear on the November ballot unless he resubmits his petition to comply with Nevada law.
The Department of Interior announced a $700 million investment in water conservation projects in the Lower Colorado River Basin.
Lithium abounds in Nevada’s federal lands and could hold the key to moving away from fossil fuels. But some worry about the environmental impact of lithium mining.
The Congressional Black Caucus chairman is calling for changes following the death of Tyre Nichols at the hands of Memphis police officers.
The Keep Americans Safe Act would ban the importation, sale, manufacture, transfer, or possession of high-capacity magazines that hold more than 15 rounds.
Moving back the deadline to mail in a ballot, requiring an ID to vote, and increasing penalties for submitting fake electoral certificates are all on the table.
Nevada will receive $55.2 million for broadband infrastructure from the Biden administration’s American Rescue Plan, the White House announced Thursday.
A newly elected member of the state Republican Central Committee was removed for recording Michele Fiore ranting about Amy Tarkanian, and a new policy prohibiting videotaping was imposed.
Many companies that donated only to former Gov. Steve Sisolak suddenly opened their checkbooks once Joe Lombardo won the governor’s race in November.
The Shoshone-Paiute Tribes of the Duck Valley Indian Reservation traces a plume of hydrocarbons to a former maintenance facility, and is asking the Legislature for money to build a new school in another location.
One bill would give free access to state parks for registered tribal members in Nevada.
The Elko County Board of Health on Wednesday decided not to ban COVID-19 and flu vaccines in the county.
Rep. Dina Titus had introduced the legislation in the last congressional session. While it passed the House, it failed under Senate Republicans, who took the provision out of the package.