Outdoor basketball is back after Gov. Steve Sisolak signed a directive Monday enabling full- and close-contact sports to resume.
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Recent pole banners on Carson Avenue represent the start of a six-month project by the city to distinguish each of its several downtown districts and encourage visitation.
Clark County’s tentative spending plan shows an 18 percent increase, largely due to increasing revenue projections that mark the start of a recovery from the pandemic.
Future for Nevadans disclosed 28 previously unreported loans from the Las Vegas councilwoman this month.
Clark County unveiled the “Back to Life” campaign on Monday, encouraging Black residents to get immunized when eligible.
Clark County must present to the state by mid-April its sweeping plan to combat the pandemic as it prepares to self-govern a wide array of measures including public gatherings and youth sports.
Las Vegas Mayor Carolyn Goodman on Wednesday ratcheted up her longstanding criticisms of public health restrictions enacted by Gov. Steve Sisolak.
The revenue from the one-eighth-of-a-cent hike has become even more important to officials seeking to address the wide-ranging affects of an unforeseen public health crisis.
Officials acknowledged a rise in xenophobia against Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders that has been stoked by the coronavirus crisis.
Local governments are calling back employees to full-time, in-person work, offering one sign that normalcy is slowly returning to the public sector.
“As a Las Vegas native, born and raised in the Historic Westside, it would be an honor and a privilege to lead the greatest city in America,” he wrote in an email to supporters Thursday.
Figures recently publicized by the city show that the new law penalized very few people in the first 12 months after its rollout.
A strike team led by the city of Las Vegas recently administered first doses at two housing complexes, representing its most direct effort to date to immunize the vulnerable.
A 55-year-old man went into a coma inside the city jail and never recovered, according to a federal lawsuit.
Cannabis dispensaries in Las Vegas will now be allowed to operate drive-thru windows, a move that follows other jurisdictions in Southern Nevada.
It is a form of hunting competition already barred by neighboring states that activists have castigated as “unethical,” “barbaric” and a “sick bloodsport.”
The county has agreed to pay $1.5 million as part of a broader settlement to resolve a federal lawsuit brought by DeMarlo Berry.