It will take months to fully fill Nevada’s Cave Lake, a once-popular fishing spot that was drained to allow a dam to be repaired.
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Nevada
The Nevada Coalition for Psychedelic Medicines will push for two bills relating to the use of psilocybin, or magic mushrooms.
The fallout over a housing development on Blue Diamond Hill continues for Clark County Commissioner Justin Jones, who could face suspension or disbarment from the State Bar of Nevada.
Nevada’s congressional delegation highlights policy priorities and bipartisan efforts under GOP control.
After receiving its largest amount of funding of $4 billion in the last legislative session, CCSD announced in September that it was facing a potential budget deficit.
The federal lawsuit claims the FDA exceeded its authority in placing special limits on mifepristone, one of two drugs used in combination for medical abortions.
State Sen. Pat Spearman, who lost a bid for mayor of North Las Vegas last year, has a bill to expand the city council to six wards starting in 2024.
The ACLU of Nevada on Thursday lauded a bill introduced in the Assembly, saying if passed, it would “make police traffic stops safer for people who are differently abled.”
A Las Vegas lawmaker introduced a bill that would require city and county jails to establish a polling place exclusively for prisoners.
Assembly Bill 144 would prohibit the sale of fluorescent light bulbs, which contain mercury and create a hazard when broken.
Superintendents and the state’s charter authority must appear at a meeting within 30 days to detail how they’d use the proposed funding, officials say.
The Culinary Union unveiled its 2023 legislative priorities, which include establishing a state lottery system and a 5 percent cap on rent hikes.
The resolution to remove a provision allowing involuntary servitude as punishment for a crime was passed by the Nevada Legislature in 2021 and again this year.
The higher education institutions refused to provide documents that should be available for public inspection under state law.
A new Review-Journal feature called “What Are They Hiding?” will spotlight all the bad-faith ways Nevada governments hide public records from taxpayers.