The fourth-highest spending category for district-issued credit card use might surprise you.
Politics and Government
Advocates with Make the Road Nevada on Monday called on President Joe Biden’s administration to expand the DACA program.
Sam Brown criticizes Rosen for voting to require women to sign up for the military draft. There hasn’t been a draft since the Vietnam War.
The deal — which aims to preserve access to the Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area — will allow Gypsum Resources to go forward with its housing development.
Following the Supreme Court ruling overturning a ban on bump stocks, Sen. Jacky Rosen joined in on a bill to ban the gun accessory.
The Clark County School District is looking to make it easier to hire retired employees to fill “critical” vacant teaching, other jobs.
More people are dying on Las Vegas Valley roads, even though officers have increased traffic citations by over 200 percent, Sheriff Kevin McMahill says.
Some street vendors said at a town hall meeting that they fear local ordinances will raise their costs to the point that they can no longer stay in business.
The more than 40,000-member Las Vegas Ethiopian and Eritreans community on Tuesday celebrated a historic milestone — the inauguration of Clark County’s first official cultural district.
Residents of the Lytle Ranch community in Moapa see their roads flood nearly every time it rains, but seeking help from the county has proved fruitless.
Candidates in Henderson’s Ward 1 special election were split in their views on the city’s plan to hire the next police chief from within the department.
The longtime investigative reporter for the Review-Journal is remembered by friends and colleagues
The leisure and hospitality sector led job growth for the Silver State last month, state officials said.
Private shower stalls are about to pop up across the Las Vegas Valley for homeless individuals wanting time to relax and refresh themselves.
The state passed the latest in a year-and-a-half’s worth of grim milestones on Friday as the state’s COVID-19 death toll surpassed 7,000.