Senate Bill 115 would prohibit patrons from having firearms at a public library, unless the library’s governing board grants them written permission.
Politics and Government
Assembly Minority Leader Paul Anderson said Tuesday lawmakers are looking at the possibility of legislation to resolve a Clark County School District lawsuit challenging aspects of the system’s mandated reorganization.
Assemblyman Elliot Anderson said Nevada should abolish the elected constitutional offices of state treasurer and controller, instead making them appointed positions within the governor’s office.
The Nevada Senate will soon consider a bill that would overturn Nevada’s ban on female genital mutilation, and Senate Democrats are tripping over themselves to vote for it.
Gift from Englestad Family Foundation will enable nonprofit to send nearly 100 World War II, Korean War vets to visit nation’s war monuments in Washington, D.C., and Virginia.
Transgender witnesses told a legislative panel Tuesday that a requirement to publish their new and original names in a newspaper as part of a legal name change exposes them to discrimination and threats.
Will President Donald Trump reach across the aisle during his first joint congressional address Tuesday night or will he continue to challenge Washington, as he did in his inaugural address?
The Nevada Supreme Court and the Nevada Court of Appeals have moved to new offices in downtown Las Vegas.
Ride-hailing companies would have to verify that their drivers have state business licenses under a bill introduced Tuesday in the Nevada Senate.
Nevada’s fiber optic network may get another tool for expansion.
College of Southern Nevada President Michael Richards on Tuesday called the 15-credit requirement for the state’s first need-based grant a “straitjacket” for students.
Tesla Motors has filed an application with state utility regulators to take advantage of an economic incentive authorized by the Nevada Legislature for its gigafactory east of Reno.
President Donald Trump championed his early victories in rolling back regulations on business and called for economic prosperity and military might in a rousing speech Tuesday to Congress.
It’s Day 23. Here’s what to watch for.
Las Vegas officials are considering cracking down on olfactory offenses and setting city standards to measure odors, curtail nuisance smells and identify those being emitted from potentially harmful substances.