The Las Vegas City Council should wait for a court decision before deciding whether or not to allow development of the Badlands Golf Course.
Opinion Columns
The existence of racial disparities — from Major League Baseball to school discipline — shouldn’t be even evidence to establish discrimination.
Joe Biden is the frontrunner for the Democrat presidential nomination. He’s also being underestimated.
Nevada will be one of the most important states in the 2020 presidential election. That would change if the National Popular Vote goes into effect.
A decision to allow development on the former Badlands Golf Course could put other neighborhoods at risk.
Nevada’s upcoming budget is going to be its largest ever. Legislators still want to spend more than is available.
Over the last two years, President Donald Trump’s Twitter feed had been foreshadowing many of the findings of the just-released Mueller report. That’s both a good and bad thing for the president.
Eliminating the subminimum wage will end training and work opportunities for some members of the disabled community. Instead of doing something productive, they would be stuck in adult day care. That’s according to Tracy May-Brown, Opportunity Village’s director of advocacy, board and government relations.
Criticizing someone’s political views shouldn’t be conflated with threatening their life. When it comes to Rep. Ilhan Omar, that somehow has become a debatable contention.
Radical feminists are becoming some of the most outspoken opponents of the transgender movement.
A constitutional restriction on tax increases could end up saving Opportunity Scholarships.
Harry Reid’s disdain for the truth finally came back to bite him.
When it comes to handling education issues, Gov. Steve Sisolak is getting schooled.
The people most passionate about not hiking the subminimum wage for people with disabilities are advocates for people with disabilities.
The Southern Nevada Water Authority wants to take billions of gallons of water that doesn’t exist from Eastern Nevada via a pipeline that would cost ratepayers $15 billion. Doing so would devastate the wildlife and people who live there. That’s according to Kyle Roerink, executive director of the Great Basin Water Network, which opposes the pipeline.