Clark County Education Association Executive Director John Vellardita told the Review-Journal that the CCSD’s description of his statement as race-based discrimination was not accurate.
Education
The public charter school’s board will consider a recommendation Feb. 27 to continue operating the high school at all grade levels, according to a letter to parents.
West Preparatory Academy celebrated a ‘Super School Meals’ initiative that will help 72 high-needs Nevada schools provide meals to its students.
The board failed a motion to approve Superintendent Jesus Jara’s resignation and a contract amendment, but later gave an OK to negotiate a contract termination
The teachers union has asked a court to force the district to turn over records after an X account under Jara’s name called a union official a “mistress.”
A second education group is challenging a Nevada Legislature bill that provides public funding to help build an Athletics ballpark on the Las Vegas Strip.
A lottery will be conducted to select students by May 31 if there are more applicants than available seats. Parents will be notified in early June.
Target says it will stop selling a product dedicated to Civil Rights icons after a now-viral TikTok spotlighted some significant errors.
Education officials are probing the use of federal pandemic relief dollars to send staffers to beach destinations after a Review-Journal investigation.
UNLV President Keith Whitfield announced additional security initiatives for UNLV’s Maryland Parkway campus.
The Clark County School District Police Department arrested Roberta McIntyre and booked her into the Clark County Detention Center.
About 200 students spent the day learning about the importance of wetlands in the driest state in America.
The Just One Project, a nonprofit mobile food pantry, held a ribbon-cutting ceremony Thursday for the “Community Market at Mojave High School” in North Las Vegas.
The ACLU of Nevada announced the lawsuit, which names CCSD Superintendent Jesus Jara, a high school principal and a former principal as defendants.
The head of Clark County’s teachers union said the timing of Superintendent Jesus Jara’s resignation is “very suspicious” and that the union believes a scandal is brewing.
