Plans to turn Yucca Mountain into the nation’s nuclear waste repository have long received opposition from both sides of the aisle. But, is that changing?
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Legislation that would allow mining companies to use public land regardless of whether mineral deposits have been found on the land passed the House and will head to the Senate.
Gov. Joe Lombardo and other Nevada officials wrote a letter opposing the plan, which they fear could impact elections and the local economy.
ChatGPT wrote a poem about Nevada’s politics and was asked to include important landmarks. Here’s what it gave.
Reps. Susie Lee and Steven Horsford joined 13 other House Democrats in urging President Biden to take executive action on the U.S.-Mexico border.
Hartman claims the meeting’s agenda violated the law because it did not reference “marijuana,” “early start” or “Question 2.”
The Nevada Senate gave unanimous approval Monday to a bill extending temporary protection orders when the target of the order cannot be found to receive service.
Town halls, luncheons and rallies have been dominated by raucous protesters, often in a seemingly coordinated effort. But as the sea of heckling and protest continues to build, a call for moderation rings from both sides.
State Sen. Mark Manendo resigned his chairmanship Monday of the Senate Transportation Committee amid an ongoing investigation into sexual harassment allegations.
Nevada Gov. Brian Sandoval signed 22 bills into law on Monday that affect issues like public safety, concealed firearms permits, and public education.
Nearly three dozen more bills were tossed to the legislative scrap heap after failing to advance beyond a do-or-die deadline.
Police responding to robberies at medical marijuana dispensaries may be able to tap into a live security camera feed.
A bill that would expand the categories of public officials and government employees who can ask a court to make confidential public records identifying their addresses and other personal identifying information now includes lawmakers.
Minimum wage, car seats and feral cats highlight the 106th day of the Nevada Legislature.
The Nevada Department of Wildlife’s public service announcements aim to be as eye-catching as they are informative.