The Review-Journal’s biggest online stories of the year covered everything from a mass shooting to roster moves by the Raiders before training camp.
News
Nevada residents with certain medical conditions can now add the “Star of Life” symbol to their driver’s license.
Clark County pet stores can no longer sell dogs, cats, rabbits or potbellied pigs after an ordinance went into place this week.
Though Nevada saw its labor force reach an all-time high last month, the state’s unemployment rate was unchanged from October at 5.4 percent.
Vice President Kamala Harris will start the new year with a visit to Las Vegas.
The funds are part of a total of $51 million from the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act passed in 2021 that will fund 18 projects in eight states.
Warren Whitney, a long-time paramedic, joined the Clark County Fire Department in 1995 and served as a firefighter, engineer, captain and deputy fire chief.
A horse at an event in Clark County confirmed positive for an equine virus.
“This is likely one of the largest solar radio events ever recorded,” the Space Weather Prediction Center said in a post on X.
Several agencies reached agreements with the federal government to conserve water from the seriously taxed Colorado River.
A tuberculosis investigation is underway involving a person with active TB who was on 26 Clark County School District campuses and at a district training center.
The Sunday afternoon crash will be investigated by the Federal Aviation Administration and National Transportation Safety Board.
Police detectives are seeking video and eyewitnesses in the 15 minutes leading up to noon Wednesday to help with their investigation.
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Residents throughout the Las Vegas Valley were reacting to the news that Donald Trump had become the first former president to be convicted of felony crimes.
Imprisoned for a Las Vegas fatal DUI, former NFL player Henry Ruggs is in a prison work program that placed him at the Governor’s Mansion.
Trump is expected to appeal the verdict and will face an awkward dynamic as he returns to the campaign trail tagged with convictions.
Las Vegas’ budget has already taken a hit from one of the cases won by developer Yohan Lowie, whose stymied housing plans for a shuttered golf course led to extensive litigation.