Two summers ago, RedEye was just one of 57 companies that submitted a proposal to provide a water technology solution to Nevada.
Nicole Raz
Nicole Raz became business editor of the Review-Journal in 2018. An Albuquerque, New Mexico, native, Raz came to Las Vegas after living in Washington, D.C., where she worked as a radio reporter and earned two journalism awards. Raz graduated from American University.
The company that bartenders say hired them for the Route 91 Harvest music festival went out of business, resulting in an investigation surrounding its hiring practices and many bartenders claiming they didn’t receive proper pay.
An annual survey commissioned by Nevada State Bank of small-business decision-makers throughout Nevada, found recordlevels of confidence in the state economy.
Nevada’s abundant sunshine, which often attracts businesses, will be one of the biggest challenges for a new bitcoin mining company setting up in Las Vegas.
The board of the Governor’s Office of Economic Development is expected Thursday to approve $26.3 million in tax abatements to EdgeCore.
A select group of 20 to 30 companies from Poland will compete next month to set up operations in Nevada.
One year and three months after it opened, the RedFlint experience center has closed.
It’s unclear how Presidents Donald Trump’s plans to impose tariffs on steel and aluminum could affect Southern Nevada’s $18.8 billion worth of planned, proposed and underway construction projects .
A lack of housing, basic infrastructure and population density coupled with a very visible homeless presence are the obstacles that entrepreneurs say are keeping downtown from realizing its full potential as a startup hub.
Meal kit company One Potato will begin offering its product in Nevada beginning Wednesday.
Simple ESG’s lawsuit, filed Friday in Clark County District court, alleges that Republic Services is actively trying to push Simple ESG out of business.
Contributions from the Southern Nevada gaming, tourism and entertainment industry accounted for almost 40 percent of the $31.4 million collected by the Las Vegas Victims’ Fund, organizers of the fund said Friday.
The fund’s committee reveals donation total and says it will distribute the money to at least 532 claimants by the end of the month. Some other claims are still going through the vetting process.
The Las Vegas Victims’ Fund is slated to begin distributing payments to eligible victims Monday, according to the original plan, but fund officials have not yet said how much money has been collected.
A chunk of Southern Nevada’s population boom is made up of executive-level talent. A group of Southern Nevada executives, most new to Las Vegas, will get the scoop next month on navigating the local business community.