State Sen. Melanie Scheible, D-Las Vegas, had 17 of her bills survive a key deadline earlier this month, the most of any sitting Nevada lawmaker.
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2023 Legislature
The Nevada Assembly voted 30-12 in favor of a wide-ranging water conservation bill that could lead to caps on residential water use in Las Vegas.
North Las Vegas’ City Council may soon gain two seats after state senators voted Monday along party lines to amend the charter.
As Tuesday’s first house passage deadline looms, lawmakers in the Nevada Legislature will decide which bills will advance in the legislative process.
Imagine an open primary system, getting results for some races on Election Day and being able to check your phone to see how long the lines are to vote in person.
A new poll shows Nevada voters want the choice of medical aid in dying, but opponents say the measure comes with unintended consequences.
Individuals under the age of 21 may soon be barred from possessing certain semiautomatic firearms after lawmakers in the Assembly voted to advance the measure.
A bill named for Henderson teenager Rex Patchett proposes increasing the maximum penalty for reckless driving in Nevada.
Physician-assisted suicide is a step closer to being legal in Nevada after senators voted on a razor-thin margin to advance a resolution Wednesday.
Vice President Kamala Harris applauded Nevada legislative leaders for their efforts to protect reproductive rights during a visit to Reno Tuesday.
An amendment to the Nevada Constitution guaranteeing an individual’s right to reproductive freedom is one step closer to coming before voters in 2026.
Bills that survived passing from committee last week will now move to the Assembly and Senate floors for final passage by an April 25 deadline.
Bills to cap the price of certain prescription drugs and mandate substitute teachers hold an associate’s degree were among those to survive Friday’s bill-killer deadline.
Nevada won’t see immediate impacts from a Texas judge ruling against a popular abortion pill, but lawmakers are taking steps to protect abortion rights in the state.
Lawmakers introduced the bill in response to a Review-Journal investigation that showed some of the largest real estate transactions did not pay a transfer tax.