The Wild West of the dental industry silently hides in search engine algorithms that draw internet traffic to advertising for dentists.
2017 Legislature
Businesses would be prohibited from using form contracts that waive the rights of consumers to post reviews of goods or services under a bill passed unanimously Wednesday by the Nevada Senate.
U.S. Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto will give a speech Thursday to the joint session of the Nevada Legislature.
School districts could lease school buses and other vehicles for private events under a bill approved Wednesday by the Nevada Senate.
Future justice of the peace candidates could sooner know the salaries for the position under a bill heard Wednesday in the Assembly Judiciary Committee.
Conversion therapy bill gets committee hearing, but first: more floor sessions in the Nevada Legislature.
Nevada would become the eighth state in the U.S. requiring many private companies to give workers paid sick leave under a bill passed by the Senate on Tuesday.
Helmets would become required headgear for moped riders under a bill passed Tuesday by the Nevada Senate.
Current and retired cops might soon be able to leave their personal addresses off their Nevada’s driver’s licenses.
People with vested claims to water will have 10 years to submit proof of their claim or risk losing them under a bill unanimously approved Tuesday by the Nevada Senate.
School principals would again be entitled to union bargaining under a bill unanimously approved Tuesday by the Nevada Senate.
Nevada spends millions of dollars each year to train state lawyers, law enforcement and other state employees. And each year, the state watches that money leave as dozens of those employees jump to local government jobs that offer higher pay and better benefits.
The Nevada Senate approved a bill Tuesday authorizing the release from prison of some older inmates convicted of nonviolent crimes.
Assembly Bill 451, which would mandate at least six hours of training in the first and third years of their terms, is approved by a 41-0 vote and advances to the state Senate.
Nevada voters may decide if the state will change the structure of the board that grants pardons.