Early voting begins Saturday for the June 11 primary. Here’s what you need to know.
Politics and Government
These are eight legislative races Southern Nevadans should know about.
Overtime doubled the base pay of some Clark County firefighters in 2022, records show.
North Las Vegas voters will decide during the upcoming primary election whether a pair of property taxes will continue funding public safety and public works.
Early voting for the June 11 primary begins Saturday and ends June 7. Here’s what your ballot might look like if you’re a nonpartisan voter.
Nevada lawmakers on Thursday moved to replenish a state fund earmarked for protecting visiting politicians. The fund was unexpectedly depleted in the wake of the Oct. 1 mass shooting, which prompted visits from President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence.
For the past 11 years, the Southern Nevada Water Authority has been raising livestock and growing hay on a 23,500-acre ranch in eastern Nevada, though it really only cares about one thing: the water.
The Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority is wasting tax dollars. The question now is whether anyone with any power is going to do anything about it.
The majority of Las Vegas police civil asset forfeitures are done in low-income and minority neighborhoods, a Nevada Policy Research Institute report shows.
Three years and two dozen motions later, a federal court in Las Vegas will hear a federal lawsuit Monday that seeks to block the Southern Nevada Water Authority from siphoning groundwater from a 300-mile swath of eastern Nevada.
Las Vegas City Councilman Stavros Anthony filed to run for Congress Monday, with eyes towards unseating freshman Democrat Ruben Kihuen.
Rafael Lopez was brought to the U.S. from Mexico as a child, graduated from UNLV, works in a job he loves and also owns a car. None of these accomplishments would have been possible without the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, he said.
The specter of North Korea armed with nuclear-bomb-tipped missiles is such “a serious threat for the world” that a top U.S. scientist says President Donald Trump should send an envoy to Pyongyang to persuade Kim Jong Un’s regime to end its doomsday posturing.
Longtime Las Vegas resident lived out his dreams by working on U.S. space program, helped develop stockpile stewardship program at the test site after end of full-scale nuclear testing.
For now, state Department of Wildlife will await further reports on the presence of the South American flesh-eaters.