Property taxes, construction defects and guns highlight day 65 of the Nevada Legislature.
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U.S. Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke lifted a ban Monday on motorized vehicles in some parts of a Utah canyon that was the setting of a 2014 ATV protest ride that was a flashpoint in the Western struggle over government land management.
Unions and patient advocates presented legislation Monday attempting to build on the momentum of other states to end surprise medical bills in Nevada.
The Assembly education committee unanimously approved sending the Clark County School District reorganization bill to a floor vote.
A resolution restating the Legislature’s opposition to any effort to license Yucca Mountain as a high-level nuclear waste dump was approved Monday by an Assembly panel.
The Assembly Labor and Commerce Committee on Monday heard Assembly Bill 431, which would nearly triple the number of barrels a craft brewery can produce annually.
A Nevada Senate committee heard a bill Monday to undo a collective bargaining law that employee groups complained unfairly harms public workers.
Two Nevada freshmen in the U.S. House of Representatives return to the Silver State this week to address joint sessions of the state Senate and Assembly.
On day 81 of his presidency, President Donald Trump had a taste of what it is like to be a president with victory under his belt.
The Senate Judiciary committee took up a pair of bills Monday aimed at protecting vulnerable Nevadans who are under guardianships.