COVID-19’s latest variant is on the loose, but local experts think vaccines can mitigate its spread and severity.
coronavirus
Gov. Joe Lombardo signed a bipartisan bill to repeal COVID-era health regulations.
Expect to pay out-of-pocket for over-the-counter COVID-19 tests, for a start.
Already at pandemic lows, COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations dipped this week.
Given that the population of Nevada is relatively young, the state “should have done better,” said one health expert.
Ben McAdams, along with Mario Diaz-Balart, revealed the news Wednesday.
Reported cases of COVID-19 in Clark County have increased by 27, from 42 to 69, the Southern Nevada Health District announced on Wednesday. Nye and Douglas counties report their first cases.
Moves follow closure of schools, abrupt layoff of workers as the valley copes with coronavirus outbreak fallout.
It appears pets may be safe from the COVID-19 virus that is killing thousands as it advances across the globe.
Students living in dorms at Nevada universities have been asked to leave and return to their homes and families as part of the closure of all nonessential operations at Nevada System of Higher Education schools.
Starting Friday, all inmates in Las Vegas with District Court hearings are expected to appear via video conferencing, the order signed by Chief Judge Linda Marie Bell stated.
Nevada is one of the first states to get approval for the U.S. Small Business Administration loans, an advisory from the governor said.
Surreal would not cover the crisscrossing emotions, and very real anxiety, of this experience.
A worker at the Catholic Charities of Southern Nevada shelter has tested positive for COVID-19, the nonprofit announced Wednesday.
Around 1 p.m. Wednesday, crews could be seen working all around the stadium, carrying out signage work and curtain wall duties, among a bevy of tasks.
The handful of people trickling through McCarran International Airport’s Terminal 1 baggage claim Wednesday had plenty of room to keep their distance from each other.
The U.S. Senate, with a large bipartisan majority, on Wednesday passed a coronavirus relief bill that the House approved on Saturday. It now goes to President Trump for his expected signature.
Service will be suspended Thursday in the wake of the governor’s request that all nonessential businesses close for 30 days because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Absent a “shelter-in-place” order, taking walks, going on hikes and riding bikes remain permissible, and there was plenty of evidence this week of people doing just those things.
The Clark High grad is donating to a different charity each day and urging viewers to do the same.