Shoppers continued stocking up on some food and household goods at grocery stores across the Las Vegas Valley Friday as uncertainty spread amid news of additional closures aimed to slow the spread of the coronavirus.
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The district is not closing schools over coronavirus fears, it told parents in phone calls late Friday, promising classes would resume on Monday as usual.
Five senior centers in Las Vegas, and part of a community center that serves seniors, will close indefinitely beginning Saturday, city officials announced Friday.
Two more Nevada colleges announced Friday that they would switch to online classes in response to coronavirus fears.
The Summerlin residents who were stuck on the Grand Princess cruise ship said they were tested for the coronavirus on Friday.
For this exercise, I choose to celebrate the gallows humor that has shown through the various social media feeds I view.
The diocese — which has a total of 3,900 students enrolled at six elementary/middle schools and two high schools — made the announcement Friday as a result of the COVID-19 virus.
“This response we’re seeing, the panicked shopping, is people trying to gain control of an unknown situation,” one psychologist said.
Are water officials prepared for widespread public illness? Can COVID-19 spread through the water system? Is stocking up on bottled water necessary? We have answers.
Clark County firefighters searched the Flamingo wash area Friday morning for possible victims of flash flooding but found no one.
As more conventions postpone or outright cancel plans, visitation appears to be slumping.
Minor flooding can be expected anywhere in the Las Vegas Valley on Friday. The North Las Vegas Airport received 1.64 inches to top valley rainfall overnight.
Effects of coronavirus fear could leave Southern Nevada facing steep economic problems, given its lucrative convention industry and high dependence on tourism.
Thursday’s rainfall led to flooding across the valley; two people needed rescuing.