Rising temperatures have sapped more than 10 trillion gallons of water from the Colorado River over the last two decades, a recent study shows.
Colton Lochhead

A Carson City judge has ruled that the appointment of former Sen. James Settelmeyer to lead the state conservation agency does not violate the Nevada Constitution.
Clark County will not be forced to hire more Republican poll workers for its ballot signature verification board, a judge ruled Thursday.
The Las Vegas Valley Water District is expected to adopt a new rate structure so big users pay more when they use more water.
A report says that infrastructure improvements are badly needed at Glen Canyon Dam to keep Colorado River water flowing downstream.
Circa is getting set to launch a Vegas Vickie NFT collection that it says will make it the first Las Vegas casino on the blockchain.
Penn National Gaming on Thursday reported net income of $44.8 million, 26 cents per share, on revenue of $1.57 billion for the quarter that ended Dec. 31.
Thousands of companies will unveil their latest products when CES opens its trade show doors this week. On Monday evening, CES gave the media an early look at what to expect.
Herds of rodeo fans who have spurned Nevada’s indoor mask mandate at this year’s Cowboy Christmas have caught the attention of state regulators.
A marijuana cultivator and producer in Washoe County could lose its license after a complaint was filed, alleging it avoided paying hundreds of thousands of dollars in taxes.
MGM Resorts International CEO Bill Hornbuckle said the company is starting the process of selling the operations of one of its Las Vegas Strip properties.
The National Labor Relations Board says that Station Casinos is hindering an ongoing unfair labor practice case and is asking a federal court to step in.
Caesars Entertainment brought in $2.5 billion in net revenues during the quarter ending June 30, nearly 20 times what the company generated in the same period of 2020, officials shared during earnings call.
As disputes over water rights increasingly end up in lengthy legal battles, the Nevada Supreme Court is potentially looking to reshape how the nation’s driest state handles water law.
If you’ve got enough money, acres upon acres of undeveloped land and an “innovative technology,” you soon could form a new local government in Nevada.