One of Las Vegas Valley’s busiest roads is getting improvements aimed at increasing safety and residents can provide input through May 21.
News Columns
Beginning May 3, 2023, anyone who doesn’t have a valid passport or military ID must obtain a Real ID in order to fly domestically in the U.S.
Shutting down a portion of Las Vegas Boulevard and Flamingo Road, as was done for the NFL draft, is no easy task.
Consistently one of the more dangerous roads in Southern Nevada, State route 160 is being eyed for another improvement project.
Motorists started to feel the impacts last week of the construction tied to hosting the NFL Draft in Las Vegas. Instead of complaining about it, they should welcome it.
Fatal crashes in the Las Vegas Valley are increasing as the statewide average is declining.
Nothing gets motorists riled up like a good ol’ fashioned carpool lane talk.
After almost two years of receiving motorists complaints, NDOT reviewing HOV lane usefulness on Las Vegas.
A pair of freeway-related improvement projects are set to get underway this year — one near downtown Las Vegas and the other in the Henderson area.
With gas prices nearing the $5 per gallon mark over the weekend, the jump over the last month of more than $1 a gallon can be a hit on motorists’ wallets.
Motorists in the East Las Vegas Valley should brace for major traffic disruptions as the continued upgrade of Nellis Boulevard moves forward.
As Las Vegas saw early on with the return of leisure travelers following pent up demand after many not traveling for several months, the business side is starting to mimic that behavior in Southern Nevada, Harvey noted.
The final phase of a yearslong, multiple phase widening of the Interstate 15 north corridor is set to get underway this year.
If last month’s incident of the U.S. Highway 95 at Eastern Avenue bridge collapsing during planned demolition had you worried about the safety of road structures in the Silver State, this should help calm those nerves.
The number of electric vehicles registered with the Nevada Department of Motor Vehicles has increased 133 percent in the last two years, going from 7,381 in 2019 to 17,162.