Changes go into effect this year.
Editorials
January represents a time of new beginnings, an opportunity for self assessment and productive change — unless you sit in Congress, where inertia and fiscal fantasy rule the day.
Talk is cheap. Moving isn’t.
Secrecy has turned one major scandal in Clark County government into two.
It’s a lot easier to waste someone else’s money.
Southern Nevada Health District bureaucrats must be bored silly, because they’re now spending their time making it harder for people to swim.
The convictions will make an already vicious and contentious election even more so, further riling activists and creating deeper fissures.
One of the most persistent myths in politics is that rich have lower tax rates than middle-income workers. New data shows how false that is.
Who will get serious about Washington’s spending problem?
A judge paddled the Clark County School Board on the backside over the panel’s petulant response to meddling from Carson City. Will elected trustees take the lesson to heart?
Turnout is typically low, but even nonpartisans can make a difference.
Even Artificial Intelligence doesn’t have the smarts to square the left’s green agenda with the energy needs of the future.
UNLV administrators have tolerated a culture of intimidation and fright against Jewish students that comes dangerously close to antisemitism.
Many on the left accuse greedy capitalists at major outlets of exaggerating the problem to cover up mismanagement.
