Early voters on Saturday touted the convenience of not having to wait in line Election Day.
Ricardo Torres-Cortez
Ricardo Torres-Cortez covers the city of Las Vegas and Clark County. He returned to the Review-Journal, where he’d interned, after a five-year stint at the Las Vegas Sun newspaper. A Mexican-born graduate of UNLV, he’s passionate about soccer, video games, books and coffee.
Clark County School District police have arrested a man connected to a student-teacher fight at Valley High School on Thursday.
While music instruments can be purchased online, why not visit your local brick and mortar shop to talk music with an expert face to face?
Two Las Vegas police officers who helped one of the victims of the fatal shooting were honored at an event at Resorts World.
Stories from public transportation to eviction court hearings documented civic concerns.
Trey Turley’s “Gamerz Garage” taps into a mammoth industry with about $55 billion in U.S. market revenue, according to most recent figures provided by Statista.com.
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.
Volunteers tallied 6,566 unhoused locals, the highest number since 2015, according to figures from Southern Nevada Homelessness Continuum of Care.
Clark County awarded a private ambulance company additional territory from its competitors with the goal of improving late response times for high-priority 911 calls.
The city will now need to search for his replacement before Jorge Cervantes’ last day.
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.
Exploring local government agendas is as easy as surfing the internet, and voicing support or displeasure is as easy as showing up to the City Council and County Commission meetings.
A judge has sanctioned Justin Jones for being untruthful about deleting relevant text messages from his phone in a lawsuit over a development atop Blue Diamond Hill.
As the sun prepares to rise Thursday, hundreds of volunteers will begin to disperse across Clark County in a daylong mission to find out how many people are experiencing homelessness throughout the valley.
The new Harvey Munford Street, tucked in a Historic Westside neighborhood, was just one in a long list of accomplishments for a Nevada fixture.