A series of Spaghetti Bowl ramp closures in downtown Las Vegas kick off tonight.
Mick Akers
Mick joined the Las Vegas Review-Journal as transportation reporter in November 2018. He previously worked at the Las Vegas Sun covering a variety of beats including transportation, business, gaming, and city and county government. Prior to that, he worked at the Pahrump Valley Times, where he was named the Nevada Press Association’s Outstanding Journalist in the intermediate category for his coverage of the Lamar Odom brothel overdose situation, rural healthcare and more. Mick was born in Texas but grew up in Las Vegas, attending UNLV’s Hank Greenspun School of Journalism and Media Studies where he was a member of the Kappa Tau Alpha National Journalism Society.
Motorists passing by McCarran International Airport this week need not worry if an emergency scene appears to be unfolding.
The Las Vegas Strip is set for a multiyear construction project that should be anything but entertaining for motorists.
Relief is coming to motorists who drive on two of the most traveled roads in the Las Vegas Valley.
Readers have made it abundantly clear — some Las Vegas motorists are in need of a driver’s education refresher class.
As the use of ride-sharing increases around the Las Vegas Valley, especially along the Strip, bus use in the area continues to fall.
Dozens of freeway signs are set for upgrades in the valley.
Travelers flying between Las Vegas and Sacramento have one more nonstop link to choose from.
The first of two projects to widen the 215 Beltway in the southwest valley kicks off next week.
The $34 million project is expected to begin early next year with completion in late 2021, the Nevada Department of Transportation announced Tuesday.
Las Vegas’ airport could soon see the first daily nonstop service to Japan since 2006.
After more than three months of waiting, Las Vegas Valley motorists soon will be able to skip the line at area Department of Motor Vehicle offices.
The Federal Aviation Administration’s ordered grounding of all Boeing 737 MAX aircrafts in the U.S won’t have much impact on Las Vegas.
A Chicago woman pressed her luck Monday at Las Vegas’ airport, ending up behind bars for allegedly assaulting a police officer after initially walking away with a citation for an earlier brush with the law, police said.
A newly formed council by the U.S. Department of Transportation could be the jolt needed to make experimental modes of travel a reality.