Budget bills, marijuana tax and small business loans are three things to watch as the 2017 session of the Nevada Legislature nears its end.
Opinion Columns
The media aren’t supposed to run away from stories like this.
Democrats could put Uber out of business in Nevada without recording a vote on the final legislation. Welcome to the last 128 hours of the 2017 Nevada Legislature.
Health benefits, child care and potential vetoes highlight the 115th day of the Nevada Legislature.
CARSON CITY — Sometimes, bills linger in the legislative building because interested parties are forging compromises behind the scenes. Sometimes, bills linger because lawmakers want them to die.
Republican leaders left a closed-door negotiation session on Monday morning optimistic about a compromise on Education Savings Accounts.
The end of the 2017 legislative is rapidly approaching, and much work remains.
Uber is so popular the taxi industry has turned to a last-minute legislative Hail Mary to try and push rideshare companies out of Nevada.
Here are three things to watch on day 113 of the 2017 legislative session.
If you have a superior product, you don’t need a government mandate.
The bill to make public information secret has a secret of its own.
Senate Bill 384 has been many things in its short life, but it has never been a good idea.
The reversal has now begun. The first act was Trump’s Riyadh address to about 50 Muslim states (the overwhelming majority of them Sunni) signaling a wide Islamic alliance committed to resisting Iran and willing to cast its lot with the American side.
Hero vets dying in battle is a tragedy. But allowing our heroes to die at the hands of the VA is a national disgrace.
Marijuana tax, collective bargaining and a deadline day mark the 110th day of the Nevada Legislature.