The scene has been playing out for weeks now across town, as various Las Vegas institutions resume daily operations, each providing its own chapter in the story of a 24/7 city getting back on its high-heeled feet.
Reopening Las Vegas
More than two months into a state-mandated shutdown, some Las Vegas casinos and restaurants are planning to reopen their doors to the public June 4.
The notices comply with the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act, which is meant to ensure employees have notice before significant layoffs.
The Board of Commissioners takes the first step toward regulating Uber Eats, Grubhub, Postmates and other fees.
The Moapa Valley Community Education Advisory Board says the school district’s one-size-fits-all approach to reopening school campuses doesn’t fit the needs of its rural community.
Las Vegas’ jobless rate tumbled last month as casinos reopened but remains far higher than other areas of Nevada.
Clark County School District students will start the 2020-21 school year remotely following a vote from the School Board on Tuesday night to approve a full-time return to distance learning.
The Nevada System of Higher Education’s Board of Regents will hear presentations Thursday about each school’s reopening plan but isn’t slated to take action.
The celebrity chef’s sports bar and restaurant had been shuttered since the COVID-19 shutdown.
The union said it moved to dismiss the lawsuits because an expedited arbitration is scheduled to begin with MGM this week.
Two more businesses have violated health and safety measures, while overall compliance has increased.
Foot traffic in Las Vegas casinos is starting to slow as the number of COVID-19 cases rises.
‘Tenet’ has been taken off the Warner Bros. release schedule, and one industry analyst predicts U.S. theaters will stay closed until next summer.
Some Nevada families dissatisfied with the school options available to them this fall are turning instead to microschool options.
What local experts say we can learn from countries that curbed their outbreaks or never let them spiral out of control.
The notices asking for repayment come at a time when many jobless Nevadans are struggling to cover basic expenses.
Many teachers say CCSD should follow the example of big public school districts in California and adopt an online-only start to the year.