The Colorado River Water Users Association conference, held at Paris Las Vegas, brings all seven state negotiators together to discuss discuss water availability.
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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.
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.
While the Oakland Athletics are asking for public money to build a ballpark in Las Vegas, state and local officials say no to their request.
The Justice Department said the monitors will ensure compliance with federal voting rights laws.
A judge dismissed a domestic violence case against a Nye County commissioner, but the prosecutor intends to refile once witnesses respond to subpoenas to testify.
The developer of a proposed geothermal power plant is asking a judge to allow it to scale back by 80 percent the original plan U.S. land managers approved last November.
The Democratic lead is more than the party had in 2018, when it won all but one statewide office. But the more than 126,000 nonpartisan votes will likely decide the close races.
Voting centers were open late Friday accepting voters ahead of Election Day.
Potential candidates for president in 2024 know Nevada will play a big role in the nomination, so they’re introducing themselves early with visits to help candidates running this year.
Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto received $1,000 from a lobbyist for a Chinese company that has been labeled a national security threat.
Ballot collecting provisions that were passed during the pandemic and made permanent in 2021 aren’t being utilized in the 2022 elections.
Before Tuesday’s midterms, Culinary Workers Union Local 226 appeared “fired up” in its quest to knock on 1 million doors in canvassing sessions aimed at re-electing Democrats.