Last week marked the second committee passage deadline for the Nevada Legislature. One major deadline remains before the final day of session June 2.
2025 Nevada Legislature
The latest news from the 2025 Nevada Legislature in Carson City.
A bill proposes transferring over $350 million from Nevada’s Rainy Day Fund to the state’s general fund.
The bill to strengthen animal cruelty penalties passed the Nevada Assembly unanimously.
A property tax that funds hundreds of Metropolitan Police Department positions may be extended another 30 years after a key vote in the Nevada Legislature.
A proposal to give some terminally ill patients in Nevada access to life-ending medications failed to meet a key Nevada Legislature deadline on Friday.
The Nevada governor proposed grant programs to address critical provider shortages, streamlining some credentialing systems and regulating prior authorizations in insurance.
An amendment to a bill offered by Assembly Speaker Steve Yeager would provide pay raises to charter school teachers. The bill also offers bonuses for teachers in hard-to-fill positions.
The teens, ages 14 and 15, were inspired to do something about antisemitism after an increase in suspected antisemitism incidents in recent years.
An effort to cut into Delaware’s dominance in the corporate filings market by expanding Nevada’s legal infrastructure is moving through the Nevada Legislature.
Senate Majority Leader Nicole Cannizzaro’s EDUCATE Act would set up a board to oversee school districts and would let some trustees object to charter school placements.
As more women hold public office, family life is on display in tandem with lawmaking in Carson City. Mothers in the Legislature say motherhood has shaped their perspectives.
Many lawmakers said they were concerned about expanding tax credits not long after the state projected weaker-than-expected revenue projections for the upcoming 2025-2027 biennium budget.
Gov. Joe Lombardo threatened to veto an education funding bill after a Nevada Legislature panel indicated charter school staff could be left out of future pay raises.
Speaker Steve Yeager’s Assembly Bill 555 will cap the cost of insulin at $35 for people on private insurance.
Gov. Joe Lombardo unveiled his economic development bill, which includes tax credits for child care facilities and tax deductions for businesses