Floor sessions should dominate day 72 of the 2017 legislative session.
2017 Legislature
The Assembly backed legislation that extends the statute of limitations for victims of child sexual abuse to sue their perpetrators.
The Assembly passed legislation on Monday that will allow honorably discharged veterans and military personnel to get a concealed firearm permit before they turn 21.
U.S. Sen. Dean Heller, R-Nev., vowed to work against any proposal from the Trump administration that would hurt Nevada.
Hundreds of bills died Friday, including a property tax increase, the sanctuary state bill and a plastic bag ban, but the most interesting part of session is just beginning.
CARSON CITY — U.S. Rep. Dina Titus will address a joint session of the Nevada Legislature.
The Nevada Senate approved a bill Monday expanding the use of police body cameras statewide and raising the allowable surcharge on telecommunication systems counties can impose to support it.
The Nevada Senate gave unanimous support Monday to a proposed constitutional amendment expanding the rights of crime victims.
Judges playing hooky from their training may end up losing their jobs.
Felons convicted of some crimes would have their civil rights to vote and serve on juries automatically restored under a bill approved Monday by the Nevada Senate.
A bill that would have quashed a developer’s plans to build thousands of homes near Red Rock Canyon was fundamentally changed before being passed out a committee in the Nevada Assembly.
Hundreds of bills have died in the Nevada Legislature this session, impacting everything from the fish pedicure industry to inmates on death row.
The focus of the Nevada Legislature pivots from committees to floor sessions Monday when lawmakers convene for the 11th week of the 2017 session.
Nevada lawmakers picked up the pace in the 10th week of the legislative session, with debates on marijuana taxes, the so-called pink tax and collective bargaining for state workers.
State lawmakers were stunned by the volume of untested sexual assault examination kits, asking during a hearing last week how the backlog got so bad and discussing legislation to keep it from happening again.